Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

Democracy Was on the Docket in 2023, and It Won – Democracy Docket

American democracy has never been perfect, and it has always faced challenges. Yet, the assault on free and fair elections occasioned by former President Donald Trump and his supporters has little historical precedent.

Over the last few years, we have experienced a never-ending series of attacks on our democracy by a man who stands for nothing other than his own power. We have seen one of our two major parties turn its back on the American experiment in favor of raw power.

For the last several years, the most powerful check on these efforts has been the courts. As imperfect as our judiciary is, it has undeniably been the strongest bulwark against the anti-democratic plot to curtail voting, rig election rules and subvert the outcome of free and fair elections.

In the run-up to 2020, the courts protected the right to vote in the face of a world-wide epidemic. After the election, the judiciary rejected more than five dozen lawsuits filed by Trump and his allies to overturn the election results. In the years that followed, courts sided with voters against a tidal wave of new voter suppression laws.

Despite these victories, 2023 began with a dark cloud hanging over our democracy. Two critical cases were awaiting decisions in the conservative 6-3 Supreme Court. Pundits and prognosticators predicted the worst that both cases would be lost and voting rights would be set back for a generation.

They were wrong. The courts did their job. Democracy was protected.

The first of those cases, Moore v. Harper, was the most important. Over the last two decades, conservative legal groups had concocted a legal theory that state courts were powerless to review or strike down state laws that restricted voting in federal elections or rigged congressional maps. Conservatives thought Moore would be the vehicle for the Court to adopt this fringe independent state legislature theory. Instead, the Court rejected it and reaffirmed the role of state judges in protecting free and fair elections.

The second Supreme Court case involved the Voting Rights Act (VRA). Alabama thought it could use that case, Allen v. Milligan, to gut the remaining main protection of the VRA, Section 2. Instead, the Court reaffirmed 40 years of jurisprudence and interpretation of this critical law. The result is that next fall, Black Alabamians will have the opportunity to elect two congressional candidates of their choice.

As it was in previous years, one of the main story lines in 2023 is the staggering record of losses Republican lawyers had in court.

These were not the only successes for redistricting in court. Following the decision in Allen, federal courts in Louisiana and Georgia similarly struck down congressional and state legislative maps for violating the rights of Black voters. In a separate case, a three-judge panel struck down South Carolinas congressional map for violating the constitutional rights of Black voters by racially gerrymandering a critical swing district.

Perhaps the biggest redistricting victory of the year came earlier this week, when New Yorks highest court ordered the states Independent Redistricting Commission to redraw the states congressional map in time for 2024. This has the potential for Democrats to gain four to six new seats next year.

Democracy did not only win in redistricting cases, the courts protected voting rights as well.

In Pennsylvania, the courts rejected two Republican lawsuits aimed at restricting mail-in voting. In a third Pennsylvania victory, a federal court struck down the states rejection of otherwise valid mail-in ballots that have an incorrect or missing date on the outer envelope.

Voters in Georgia and Florida both gained relief from key portions of new laws prohibiting them from receiving food and water while waiting in long voting lines. Georgia also saw its law that required mail-in voters to put their birth date on their absentee ballot envelope struck down. Florida had its newest voter suppression law, enacted just this year, partially blocked.

In the Lone Star State, a federal judge struck down Texas rule requiring clerks to reject mail-in ballots if the ID number did not match the voters registration record. Iowas so-called English-only law, which mandated that all election materials be in English, was invalidated. Arizonas latest effort to make voter registration more difficult met a similar fate. And, in Michigan, after that states voter transportation ban was challenged in court, the Legislature wisely repealed it.

This year also saw important developments against election deniers. In Arizona, Republican efforts to overturn the results of the 2022 elections dragged into this year, but with no success. Not only were Kari Lake and other failed election denier candidates unable to prevail in court, their lawyers were sanctioned for filing frivolous lawsuits. Meanwhile, after refusing to properly certify the 2022 election and losing in court, Republican officials in Cochise County, Arizona were indicted in 2023.

Perhaps most importantly, Trump was indicted in Washington, D.C. for his effort to overturn the 2020 election. In Georgia state court, he was one of 18 defendants indicted for racketeering in connection with his effort to subvert that states 2020 presidential results. In addition, fake electors in Michigan and Nevada were indicted, while criminal investigations continue in several other states.

Sprinkled in among all these lawsuits were numerous cases where Republicans failed in court to make voting more difficult. As it was in previous years, one of the main story lines in 2023 is the staggering record of losses Republican lawyers had in court.

For that, as well as the victories for voters, we can all be grateful. For another year at least, democracy was on the docket and it won.

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Democracy Was on the Docket in 2023, and It Won - Democracy Docket

Biden saving a democracy: The religion of a party that doesn’t believe in God – Washington Times

OPINION:

President Biden is running for reelection to save what he calls democracy from Caesar Augustus in waiting: former President Donald Trump.

Since Bidenomics is as popular as Dylan Mulvaneys commercials for Bud Light, the presidents reelection team aka the Suicide Squad has decided that the road to victory lies in convincing voters that the likely Republican nominee is a sinister figure who would transform the land of the free into a nation of storm troopers, stiff-arm salutes and tax reform.

Mr. Biden told a fundraiser in September, Donald Trump and his MAGA Republicans are determined to destroy American democracy.

American democracy is here defined as at least 8 million illegal aliens in the past three years, trillion-dollar deficits and a war on fossil fuels. Why, the ex-president and his MAGA brownshirts might even turn the Department of Justice and the FBI on his opponents and raid their homes.

How can you destroy what doesnt exist? America is not a democracy, though were moving in that direction at alarming speed.

We started as a republic with certain democratic features. In the purest sense, democracy means majority rule in all cases with no safeguards for the rights of minorities.

If America were a democracy, presidents would be elected by direct popular vote. They would not be limited to two terms but could die in office, as Franklin Roosevelt did.

Large and small states wouldnt have the same representation in the Senate. Nine appointed (that is, unelected) officials would not determine the meaning of the Constitution.

The federal government would work as well as California.

The Founding Fathers feared democracy, not because they were plutocrats in powdered wigs, but because they knew, as students of history, thatdemocracy never worked. Thats why the word democracy appears nowhere in our nations founding documents.

The Constitution speaks of establishing justice, ensuring domestic tranquility, providing for the common defense and promoting the general welfare, all of which have been degraded by the president and his party.

As we become more democratic, we become more dysfunctional.

A republic protects the rights of citizens. A democracy ignores them when its convenient, like gun control laws that violate the Second Amendment.

A democracy is spendthrift. A republic is frugal. A republic punishes criminals. A democracy punishes everyone else. A republic jealously guards our sovereignty. A democracy is happy to surrender it piecemeal to international bodies.

Democracy is a supersized government.

In a republic, holding public office is a trust, not a career. In a democracy, someone who is dumb as topsoil can be elected in a one-party state and spend decades in the most powerful deliberative body in the world and then ascend to the presidency.

President Woodrow Wilson got us into World War I to make the world safe for democracy. Look at how well that worked. We toppled monarchies to see them replaced by totalitarian regimes.

Democracy is about expanding the franchise to the point of absurdity. On Dec. 6, Rep. Ayanna Pressley, Massachusetts Democrat, introduced legislation to allow 16-year-olds and incarcerated citizens (felons in prison) to vote in federal elections.

If 16-year-olds have the wisdom and maturity to vote, why not 12-year-olds, especially with members of the teachers unions to guide them?

Who better to have a hand in making our laws than those convicted of repeatedly breaking our laws? Marxists who believe crime is caused by economic injustice can relate to incarcerated citizens.

The Democratic Party wants to see elections dominated by the clueless, like the 25% of college students who think the Holocaust is a myth.

Democracy is a con. Elites control the process and make the masses think theyre in charge.

When did we vote on President Bidens college debt forgiveness scheme, government paying for the genital mutilation of minors, open borders or international climate change initiatives that will send us reeling back to the Stone Age?

Democracy is the religion of the party that doesnt believe in God. Politicians like Mr. Biden and Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer are its high priests.

Mr. Biden cant even quote the preamble to the Declaration of Independence correctly. During the 2020 campaign, the president declared: We hold these truths to be self-evident. All men and women are created by the, you know, you know, the thing.

Who better to lead a crusade to save democracy from The Donald and his MAGA meanies?

The best thing Mr. Biden could do for representative government would be to take a civics course after he resigns from office.

Don Feder is a columnist with The Washington Times.

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Biden saving a democracy: The religion of a party that doesn't believe in God - Washington Times

Letter: U.S. democracy not in danger | Letters to the Editor | postandcourier.com – The Post and Courier

Brookings Institute member and Washington Post columnist E. J. Dionne proves once again how wrong leftist media can be: Democracy faces two threats. Trump is only one of them, published in the Aiken Standard on Nov. 29.

Those who claim Trump threatens democracy overestimate his power and underestimate the Constitution. As we learned in grade school (before they switched to DEI) our federal government has a system of checks and balances which our Founding Fathers well versed in tyranny made a cornerstone of federal government. Whoever wins in November will not be a threat to American democracy.

Dionne then jumps to the frequent Democratic battle cry of voting restrictions. Every citizen has and should have the right to vote but with proper documentation at a legitimate voting site. The next election and those in the future will be hampered by identification standards due to the unchecked migration of over 12 million illegal migrants. They should not be allowed to vote until they have been educated and processed as American citizens.

In the meantime, American democracy will soon reach its 250th anniversary. It is not an experiment. And the left should desist with claims that it is endangered.

James Haviland

Aiken

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Letter: U.S. democracy not in danger | Letters to the Editor | postandcourier.com - The Post and Courier

Our democracy is dying of internal rot – The Montana Standard

Our democracy is dying of internal rot

So many of our politicians are willing to corrupt the checks and balances aspects of our democracy to benefit themselves and their political party. Tactics include gerrymandering, voter suppression, even efforts to limit the courts' capacity to proclaim their laws unconstitutional.

What's more, former President Trump has revealed his intentions for a second term.

First, and perhaps most daunting, he and his closest allies have promised sweeping transformations of the federal government. They envision a presidency that would be endowed with new and unprecedented powers.

There is a plan to purge the federal workforce of anyone deemed disloyal.

The plan also includes the capacity to wield the power of federal law enforcement against political enemies.

The former president even went so far as to state that former Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley should be executed.

Trump is a clear and present danger to our democracy. Not only are his plans reminiscent of the tactics used by numerous dictators, but he has also repeatedly praised the likes of Russias Vladimir Putin and North Koreas Kim Jong Un, saying they are very smart.

We cannot allow a second Trump presidency because he plans an autocracy instead of a representative republic guided by voters.

And the sad irony is that because authoritarians cant afford to have a populations of gun owners, almost immediately many of the day-to-day gun-owning MAGA boosters will lose their guns, their freedom or even their lives.

There will be no more voter rights. The free press will disappear. The right to free assembly to protest will be ripped away. We just must realize that what we are all headed toward is a full-fledged dictatorship.

Some, of course, will become the minions of the emerging fascist regime. They will be the white supremacists who followed the instructions to stand down and stand by.

Are you not interested in the dictatorship they are planning? Then, the time to act is now. The 2024 election is the crucial end point of our opportunity to end the current slide toward a Trump-led autocracy.

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Our democracy is dying of internal rot - The Montana Standard

Minnesota Judge Dismisses Right-Wing Challenge to Voting Rights Restoration Law – Democracy Docket

WASHINGTON, D.C. A Minnesota judge on Wednesday dismissed a right-wing lawsuit seeking to invalidate legislation that restores voting rights to over 55,000 Minnesotans on parole, probation or community release due to a felony conviction.

The conservative group behind the legal challenge Minnesota Voters Alliance sought to roll back the progress made by the historic rights restoration bill that was signed into law in March 2023.

Prior to the enactment of the legislation by the states Democratic-controlled Legislature, Minnesotans with felony convictions were permitted to regain their voting rights only after the completion of their entire sentences which often include years- or decades-long periods of probation.

Under the new legislation, Minnesotans voting rights are restored immediately after release from incarceration a practice that the Minnesota Voters Alliance lawsuit argued stood in direct violation of the Minnesota Constitution. According to the lawsuit, individuals on supervised release, probation, or work release because of a felony conviction have not been restored to all civil rights and are therefore ineligible to regain voting rights until they are fully discharged from their sentences.

In Wednesdays 11-page order, the judge presiding over the case rejected the conservative plaintiffs arguments. In addition to holding that the plaintiffs lack standing to bring their lawsuit, the judge flatly rebuffed the plaintiffs notion that individuals must regain all civil rights as a prerequisite to having their voting rights restored: The major premise of this argument is fundamentally flawedContrary to Petitioners argument, [the Minnesota Constitution], does not say restored to all civil rights. Instead, it says restored to civil rights.

The judge cited a February 2023 Minnesota Supreme Court opinion in which the majority upheld the states then-limited rights restoration scheme, but explicitly held that the Legislature has broad, general discretion to choose a mechanism for restoring the entitlement and permission to vote to persons convicted of a felony.

In response to Wednesdays decision, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (D) wrote in a statement yesterday that he is extremely pleased that yet another effort to undermine the voting rights of Minnesotans has been soundly rejected.

Ellisons statement continued: The legislature has the ability to decide when voting rights are restored to Minnesotans, and todays ruling reaffirms that right and reaffirms the constitutionality of the Restore the Vote Act. This is a good day for the 55,000 Minnesotans whove had their voting rights restored. Today is also a victory for democracy here in Minnesota because our democracy is always made stronger when more people participate.

The attorneys for the Minnesota Voters Alliance have already stated that they intend to appeal Wednesdays decision.

Read the opinion here.

Learn more about the case here.

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Minnesota Judge Dismisses Right-Wing Challenge to Voting Rights Restoration Law - Democracy Docket