ELECTIONS
Arizona GOP legislator: Danger to democracy in
Supreme Court case isn’t theoretical
Some legislators want the power to nullify elections
and bypass judicial scrutiny of election laws.
Arizona offers a case study for how far some state
legislators want to go in taking control of elections if the Supreme Court
rules in favor of the independent state legislature theory. | Mario Tama/Getty
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By HEIDI
PRZYBYLA
12/07/2022
04:30 AM EST
Updated:
12/07/2022 04:42 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/12/07/arizona-legislator-danger-to-democracy-00072580
Arizona
state Sen. Paul Boyer over the past year single-handedly blocked scores of
bills that would have upended elections in his state.
The
Republican legislator says his experience shows there’s nothing theoretical
about the potential dangers of the so-called “independent state legislature theory.”
The Supreme
Court begins oral arguments this Wednesday on Moore v. Harper, a North Carolina
case in which Republicans are pushing to invalidate a state court’s
redistricting decision based on the independent state legislature theory, a
constitutional interpretation that would effectively remove the ability of
state courts to check election-related laws.
Critics
including voting rights groups, election scholars and even some conservative
judicial experts say it would undermine a more than 200-year-old tradition of
checks and balances, consolidating authority over elections in the hands of
partisan legislatures. Daniel Squadron, a former New York state senator who
co-founded The States Project, which spent millions on electing Democrats in
battleground statehouses, describes it as a “loaded gun pointed at the heart of
our democracy.”
Arizona
offers a case study for how far some state legislators want to go in taking
control of elections if the Supreme Court rules in favor of the independent
state legislature theory.
On a single
day in March, Boyer banded with the chamber’s minority Democrats and one other
Republican to vote down 12 of his own party’s bills aimed at upending elections
administration. Many of the more than 100 proposed bills he calls “crazy” this
legislative session probably would have become law next year had Democrat Katie
Hobbs not beaten Republican Kari Lake in the governor’s race and seized the
veto pen, Boyer cautioned in an interview with POLITICO in Phoenix.
“I was the
one vote for many of them,” he said, referring to several tie breaking votes he
cast.
In the
state House, one bill that did not make it for a vote would have allowed the
legislature to nullify an election or call a new one — the very nightmare
scenario court experts have warned could be attempted in statehouses across the
nation if the Supreme Court rules in favor of the independent state legislature
theory.
Numerous
conservative legal groups have lined up in support of the plaintiffs arguing
before the Supreme Court on Wednesday, arguing in part that the dire warnings
about threats to democracy are “overblown lamentations.” Concern among court
scholars has centered on legislatures undermining access to voting and forcing
unfair congressional and state legislative maps, through the threat of
legislators who would attempt to use it to overturn a federal election looms.
Jason
Snead, executive director of the Honest Elections Project, which filed an
amicus brief in support of the plaintiffs, says the concerns are “hyperbolic by
design.”
“It’s
designed to conceal what the case is really about, which is a power grab in
state courts,” said Snead, whose group has ties to Leonard Leo, the
conservative Supreme Court activist who directed millions toward advocating for
its current conservative majority. Snead said North Carolina law is unique in
its deference to legislatures to draw maps. Bartlett Cleland, counsel for the
American Legislative Exchange Council, a nonprofit organization of conservative
state lawmakers, also tried to play down the case, saying “this is not a case
that would sprawl to whether changes can be made in election procedures.”
‘The
numbers don’t lie’: Raffensperger debunks Trump’s election fraud claims
Still, the
independent state legislature theory underpinned former President Donald
Trump’s failed attempt to have states invalidate the 2020 election, and the
lawyer who conceived that strategy, John Eastman, has filed an amicus brief on
behalf of the The Claremont Institute making a similar case. While some of the
election-related laws may have survived court challenges, giving legislatures
sole authority over them would remove the ability of a state court to review
them.
“What’s at
stake here are truly the checks and balances our founders laced into the
system,” said Neal Katyal, a former acting U.S. solicitor general under
President Obama and partner at Hogan Lovells who will argue before the court on
Wednesday.
In a recent
call with reporters, Katyal emphasized the unfettered ability of statehouses to
draw gerrymandered maps — which are frequently challenged and overturned in
state courts — as the most immediate consequence of a ruling in favor of the
plaintiffs. Already in Ohio, for instance, the GOP-led legislature has for most
of this year been in open defiance of the state Supreme Court’s repeated orders
to redraw congressional and state legislative maps it has deemed gerrymandered.
The second
major threat is a flood of election administration laws that could cause chaos,
and that threat is nationwide. This year Republicans in Colorado, Arizona,
Missouri, New Hampshire, Washington and West Virginia introduced bills to ban
ballot tabulators, which would cause significant delays in counting ballots. At
the same time, politicians who deny the outcome of the 2020 election, including
Trump, have loudly protested that counties that fail to count all ballots on
Election Day are suspect.
In total,
this year there were at least 175 bills introduced in dozens of states that
would “interfere with election administration,” including requiring partisan
audits, seizing power over election authority and imposing criminal penalties
on election administrators, according to the nonpartisan States United
Democracy Center. “These burdens will push election systems to the limit at the
same time that election administration has become highly partisan and baseless
claims of fraud are rampant,” the group said in a recent report.
The
legislative push over the past year in Arizona is proof, according to Boyer and
democracy watchdog groups, that if the Supreme Court removes the guardrails
that state courts provide, partisan state legislatures could and would grab
power in numerous unconstitutional ways including overturning elections.
Arizona state Senate President Karen Fann, who helped steer the bills, and two
spokeswomen for the Arizona State Senate Republican Caucus declined email
requests for comment.
“My
colleagues would like to take a lot of control over certain aspects of
government that we’ve never historically had before,” Boyer told POLITICO in an
interview from a charter school nestled beside a red rock mountain where he is
decamping to teach Latin and history. In Arizona, Republicans even tried to
take away a commission that regulates corporations and energy policy that’s
been in the constitution since statehood in 1914, said Boyer.
“They
haven’t thought through some of these things,” he said, warning the bills would
have also created a tangle of contradictory statutes. “We’re just telling
elections officials ‘we think we know better and we will better implement
elections,’ when the reality is the counties have been doing it” for decades,
said Boyer.
At 45 years
old, Boyer is taking a “sabbatical” from public service after his term ends in
early January. “I’m just tired. I just needed the break,” he said.
Among the
bills Boyer’s helped block, one would have required an audit every two years of
federal elections — a hugely expensive undertaking that would have drained
funds from other areas of government oversight, according to Boyer — and
publicly posting digital images of voters’ ballots he says could have created
legal risks for election officials. It would have taken away legitimate audits
of other necessary departments, such as schools or the Department of
Corrections, for instance, said Boyer.
The Arizona
state House member who proposed a bill to cancel an election, Shawnna Bolick,
also ran for secretary of state. Her 2021 bill would have allowed a simple
majority of lawmakers in both chambers to revoke the secretary of state’s
certification of the winning slate of presidential electors.
“The
legislature could either nullify it and call a new election or vote for who
they think should be the winner based on whatever the legislature determines
was the bad actions of that election,” said Boyer.
Another Arizona
bill would have required Maricopa County Supervisor Bill Gates to, against
Arizona law, surrender the 2020 general election ballots to state senators. “We
were voting for, essentially, sending them to jail (for up to six months) for
following the law,” which requires a judge’s order or an official recount for
ballots to be surrendered, said Boyer.
The entire
Maricopa county board of supervisors could have faced up to six months of jail
time, he said. Nobody really knew where they would be jailed, he said. “Maybe
it was our basement or with the county sheriff,” Boyer said. Boyer recalled a
tense meeting with board supervisor Gates in which Gates said his daughter
called asking when he was going to prison. “That’s when it started, where I
became the one vote that wasn’t sticking with my party,” he said.
“You can’t
make this up,” said Boyer.
Another
would have required all of the state’s ballots be hand-counted by 9 pm on
Election night. (It took six months for a group of “cyber ninjas” in 2020 to
hand count two races.) Squadron said such bills would, in many cases, purposely
create chaos and confusion that could be used as a pretext by “rightwing” state
legislatures to intervene. “It’s all a justification for state legislatures to
step in and choose the winner,” he said.
“Even if a
handful of them passed, elections officials would not have known how to do
their jobs,” said Boyer. “The ‘Stop the Steal’ crowd would have have ‘aha,
they’re corrupt because we made sure they couldn’t do their jobs,’” said Boyer.
While
Democrat Hobbs’ narrow election victory ensures the bills won’t survive for
now, Boyer said his experience demonstrates why there is no world in which
state legislatures dominated by either political party should given free reign
over elections.
“We will no
longer be able to govern ourselves. It will be contingent upon force and
accident,” said Boyer, citing Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, who asserted
that many governments over history have been ruled by force as opposed to
“reflection and choice.”
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