Election Integrity Advocates Cheer Independent State Legislature Case Before Supreme Court
The United States Supreme Court convened its annual session in Washington on Oct. 3 with a crowded docket that includes cases related to affirmative action, gay rights, and freedom of speech and religion.
Among the most closely-watched cases slated for the term, which could see hearings extend into next summer, is a challenge to the North Carolina Supreme Court’s 2021 rejection of the legislature’s revised post-2020 Census maps for the state’s 14 congressional districts.
In placing Moore v. Harper on its docket, the nation’s highest court has agreed to resolve a decades’-long debate over the “independent state legislature theory,” which maintains the U.S. Constitution vests elections regulation entirely with state lawmakers to the exclusion of other elected officials, appointed bureaucrats, and the courts as long as their actions comply with state and federal laws.
In their appeal of the North Carolina Supreme Court’s ruling, which determined the redrawn congressional district maps were unconstitutionally gerrymandered, lawmakers say under their interpretation of the U.S. Constitution, the “independent state legislature theory” renders state courts powerless in matters relating to federal elections, including how state lawmakers draw congressional district maps.
A blizzard of briefs has been filed in the appeal. Through late September, 21 had been lodged, with 16 in support of the appellants and five arguing for “neither party.”
Theory proponents, which include election integrity advocates and conservative groups from across the country, say they seek to cuff state courts from “acting like super legislators’” while asserting state legislatures’ right as “necessary parties” to participate in all election-related lawsuits.
Among groups filing briefs in support of the theory is the Honest Elections Project (HEP), the Republican National Committee, Republican Caucus of the Pennsylvania Senate, Citizens United Foundation, and the American Legislative Exchange Council.
HEP Executive Director Jason Snead told The Epoch Times on Oct.
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