U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland
RITE sued the Maryland State Board of Elections (SBE) challenging its illegal rulemaking restricting the rights of concerned citizens to obtain public records used to investigate voter registration and voting irregularities. Maryland’s regulation violates the federal National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) which requires election officials to disclose to the public records concerning their efforts to maintain accurate and current voter rolls. RITE’s lawsuit also points out how Maryland’s rule violates plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights and exceeds SBE’s rulemaking authority under state law.
Federal law mandates that states allow the public to access and use certain registration information to evaluate whether states are complying with laws that help ensure registration lists are both accurate and current. State efforts to restrict citizen access and use of this information violate the NVRA, which was designed to improve the integrity of our elections by requiring officials to remove ineligible persons from the registration rolls. This includes the deceased and those who no longer reside in the state. There are strong indications that Maryland officials are not fulfilling their obligations to properly maintain the state’s voting rolls, as evidenced by a recent state audit report that revealed, among other alarming findings, that officials had failed to remove at least 2,426 deceased voters from the registration rolls.
RITE’s case raises important and novel legal questions regarding the scope of the NVRA’s records disclosure provision, including its coverage of voter history records that states use to remove ineligible voters in accordance with federal law.
RITE moved for summary judgment on August 30, 2024 and SBE also has a pending motion to dismiss.