Washington, DC – September 26, 2024 – Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections (RITE), a non-profit organization that supports litigation to protect election security and integrity, today filed an amicus curiae, or “friend of the court” brief, with the U.S. Supreme Court in a Montana case regarding the right of the state legislature to regulate state elections.
At issue is a Montana Supreme Court decision that disabled the state’s legislature from moving the deadline to register to vote from the close of polls on election day to noon the day before election day. The court issued this ruling even though the state’s constitution grants the legislature unfettered discretion to allow, or disallow, election-day registration. RITE’s brief argues that this is impermissible judicial lawmaking, precisely the type of conduct the Supreme Court said just last year is incompatible with the federal Constitution.
RITE President Derek Lyons issued the following statement:
“The U.S. Supreme Court correctly ruled last year that state supreme courts must be deferential to election rules enacted by state legislatures. But here, the Montana Supreme Court concluded that the legislature violated the right to vote by foreclosing citizens’ ability to register at the polls on election day. And it did so, despite the fact that the Montana Constitution expressly disclaims the existence of any right to register on election day. The Supreme Court has made it clear that state supreme courts must respect the will of the people, as reflected in the legislative enactments of their elected representatives. This case gives the Court a chance to show that it was serious about ensuring that legislatures, not courts, are in charge of our elections.”
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