Alabama Sec. of State tweets this in response to a man’s concern that to vote in the July 14 by absentee voters must have either a photocopier or smart phone/printer to mail in copy of photo ID with application. https://t.co/CLY6E1St0o
— Eddie Burkhalter (@BurkhalterEddie) April 21, 2020
A group of Americans over age 65 with health conditions sued, claiming that the requirements placed them at particular risk of contracting COVID-19. They detailed the practical difficulties they faced in complying with the additional identification requirements, and the health risks they would be forced to endure. The district court sided with the plaintiffs, finding that Alabama’s requirements placed too heavy a burden on already at-risk voters to withstand legal scrutiny.
Alabama then petitioned the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, requesting an emergency stay of the district court’s order, pending a full appeal of the case. That court refused, writing that, “The burden here is not the finding of two people or a notary to witness a signature or the finding of a location to copy one’s photo ID,” but is instead that at-risk voters, “must risk death or severe illness” to vote.
Alabama appealed the Eleventh Circuit’s denial of the emergency stay to the United States Supreme Court – and the Court granted that stay in a 5-4 vote.
SCOTUS’s ruling is a temporary one; the preliminary injunction that will allow Alabama’s voting rules to stay in place will expire if and when the Court grants certiorari in the underlying case. Furthermore, the Court’s temporary ruling may not necessarily indicate that Alabama will win prevail in its appeal – either at the Circuit Court level or ultimately, at the Supreme Court.
The petition for emergency stay was assigned to Justice Clarence Thomas, who presides over all such petitions for the Eleventh Circuit. As is typical, the Court’s order granting the stay did not include opinion or reasoning. However, the order did include notation indicating that four justices would have sided against Alabama: Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen G. Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.
[image via Photo by John Moore/Getty Images]