The split decision reversed a preliminary injunction against the law enacted in 2022.
A federal appeals court on Sept. 20 reinstated two provisions of a law pertaining to elections in Arizona that had been blocked.
The panel majority, though, said that that groups that sued over the provision donât have standing to challenge it.
Even if they had standing, the provision does not conflict with the National Voter Registration Act, because the voter is confirming theyâve changed residences by registering to vote in a new county, Lee wrote separately in a concurring opinion.
U.S. Circuit Judge Daniel P. Collins joined Lee in the ruling on standing.
Judge Jacqueline H. Nguyen, dissenting in part, wrote that the organizations do in her view have standing to challenge the cancellation provision.
âWhile plaintiffs could continue to register and educate voters without changing their practices in response to the cancellation provision, the registrations would be inadequate, and the education incomplete, under plaintiffsâ view of the law,â she said.
She added: âUltimately, it doesnât matter that the majorityâs conclusory dismissal of the merits is wrong. It is enough, for standing purposes, that plaintiffsâ statutory interpretation is at least arguable. The majority errs by requiring more.â
The majority also withdrew the preliminary injunction against another part of the law, which opens a person who âknowingly provides a mechanism for voting to another person who is registered in another state, including by forwarding an early ballot addressed to the other personâ up to a felony charge.
Snow, the district judge, had ruled that the provision was unconstitutionally vague because âmechanism for votingâ was not defined by legislators.
âIt is, therefore, not possible for a person of average intelligence to know how it will be interpreted,â he wrote at the time. âAs a result, many of plaintiffsâ organizational efforts like voter registration drives might fall within the felony provision.â
While the organizations had standing to challenge the felony provision because they face the possibility of prosecution, Lee said in the new decision, theyâre unlikely to prevail in the challenge because the phrase âmechanism for votingâ is not unconstitutionally vague.
âConstrued under its ordinary meaning, the phrase âmechanism for votingâ likely refers to a process, technique, or instrument for casting a vote,â he said. âThat plain-meaning construction of the phrase does not include activities such as voter registration because providing a mechanism for registering to vote is different from providing a âmechanism for voting.ââ
The Arizona Secretary of Stateâs office, which has been defending the law, did not respond to a request for comment. A lawyer representing the organizations that sued, which include the Arizona Alliance for Retired Americans, did not return an inquiry.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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