|
The Campaign Legal Center,
joined by a number of other public interest and civil rights
organizations, today sought to enter a case involving an attempt by the
Wisconsin Attorney General to misapply the Help America Vote Act (HAVA)
to purge state voter rolls.
"The Attorney General's suit is legally flawed and ignores both the
letter and the spirit of the Help America Vote Act," said J. Gerald Hebert, Director of Litigation for the Campaign Legal Center.
"If the Wisconsin Attorney General's lawsuit is successful, thousands
of Wisconsin voters will be disenfranchised turning the Help America
Vote Act into the 'Strip Americans of the Right to Vote Act.'"
Joining the Legal Center in the filing of a motion to participate as amici curiae and a proposed brief in Van Hollen v. Wisconsin Government Accountability Board
were the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the Brennan
Center for Justice at NYU School of Law, the League of Women Voters of
Wisconsin Education Fund, the Voting Rights Project of the American
Civil Liberties Union, the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin
Foundation, Inc., Fair Elections Wisconsin and Daniel P. Tokaji (the "amici").
The Van Hollen litigation was brought by the Wisconsin
Attorney General in the Circuit Court of Dane County and raises
important issues regarding the application of the federal Help America
Vote Act of 2002, 42 U.S.C. §15301 et seq. ("HAVA"), to the State of Wisconsin. In filing the motion to participate, the amici
advised the Court that because the Wisconsin Attorney General's
interpretation of HAVA was legally flawed, the complaint fails to state
a claim upon which relief may be granted. The motion and brief also
advised the court that the amici believed it was helpful to
place the Attorney General's construction of HAVA in a national
context, because such a context would show how his interpretation of
HAVA was significantly at odds with the understanding of HAVA adopted
by many other states.
"It is ironic that Wisconsin's top law enforcement officer would seek relief from the courts that actually would violate federal law", said Hebert.
"There is nothing in the law that requires the disenfranchisement of
persons simply because their name in the voter registration database
does not perfectly match some other data base." Hebert cited
typographical errors, clerical mistakes, use of hyphenated names, and
changes in maiden and married names as the main cause of any computer
mismatches.
"It makes little sense to strip Americans of the right to vote based
on an unsuccessful effort to match voter information with another
government data base, especially when federal law not only does not
require it but even prohibits it," Hebert
said. "The Attorney General's suit, if successful, would result in the
needless and unfair disenfranchisement of thousands of registered
voters on the eve of Election Day for something as simple as having
registered to vote using a middle initial instead of one's full middle
name as it may appear on a driver's license."
The motion and accompanying brief provided background information
concerning the practice of computer matching to explain why HAVA
generally does not link voter eligibility to the successful matching of
registration records with records contained in other databases.
Finally, the brief identifies concerns as to whether granting the
relief requested by the Attorney General could significantly interfere
with the conduct of the November 4, 2008 election in Wisconsin. To read the brief, click here. To read the motion, click here.
Comment on This Article
You must login to leave comments...
Other Visitors Comments
There are no comments currently....
|