Author Archives: ELECTIONLAWCENTER.COM

Note about future appearances

I’ve gotten some emails asking if I will be in a given place.  I try to post my radio and speaking schedule, but do not always have the opportunity to put up every single radio appearance. 

Over the next few weeks, I will be speaking in a number of cities.  I will try to post details as the events approach.  This week I will be in Houston (TX), Springfield (Mass.) and Fresno (CA).  Next week I will be in New York City, Pittsburgh (PA) and Annapolis (MD).  Over the next few weeks, I will be in Lincoln (NE), Minneapolis (MN), New Orleans (LA), and West Palm Beach (FL). 

EAC on chopping block to Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction

This little tidbit @ the Hill on the Election Assistance Dysfunction Commission.  

Democrats on the Committee on House Administration have unanimously denounced a Republican recommendation to reduce spending within the legislative branch.
 
This week lawmakers proposed cost-saving initiatives to the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction. In a letter Thursday to the joint committee co-chairmen, Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), House Republicans recommended eliminating funding for the Election Assistance Commission.
 
House Administration Committee Republicans have long advocated the dissolution of the EAC, an independent, bipartisan commission formed by the Help America Vote Act in 2002, saying the commission’s primary purpose had already been achieved.



In June, the House rejected a bill to end the commission, which Republicans said would save $33 million over five years.



“The Election Assistance Commission has fulfilled its function and is now a perfect example of unnecessary and wasteful spending,” committee Chairman Dan Lungren (R-Calif.) wrote in Thursday’s letter.
 
Committee Democrats responded swiftly to the recommendation, claiming that terminating the EAC would instead lead to problems.

Indiana voter fraud scandal grows

From Poltico



An Indiana Democratic county chairman accused of submitting petitions with hundreds of faked signatures for Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in the 2008 primary resigned Monday, according to reports.


 


St. Joseph County Democratic Party Chair Butch Morgan stepped down from his position in light of the scandal, but insisted he had “done nothing wrong,” the South Bend Tribune reported late Monday night. Morgan also resigned as Democratic chair for Indiana’s 2nd Congressional District.


 


He faces allegations he submitted hundreds of forged signatures – including that of a former governor – on petitions to get Clinton and Obama on the 2008 Indiana primary ballot.


 


“I regret having to resign and hope no one will misinterpret the reasons for my resignation,” Morgan said in a written statement. “I have done nothing wrong and I look forward to an investigation that will exonerate me of any wrongdoing.”


 


Former Democratic Gov. Joe Kernan, who supported Clinton in the 2008 primary, told the Associated Press last week he did not sign the petition for Obama, although his name is on the document. When asked whether the signature on the petition looked like his, Kernan said “no, not at all. Nor does the printing look like mine.”

ACLU and Demos outraged by Maine Secretary of State

 The ACLU and Demos have sent letters to Maine Secretary of State Charlie Summers over his examination of student voting, characterizing the actions a violation of Section 11(b) of the Voting Rights Act (voter intimidation).  I’ve been searching the internet for a copy of the letter the ACLU and Tova Wang and Demos sent to the New Black Panther Party or the Department of Justice regarding the acts of voter intimidation by the black panthers in Philadelphia. 

A free copy of my book Injustice to the first person who can find such a letter from the ACLU or Demos.

More at PJ Tatler.

Thanks King Street Patriots

Thanks to the couple of hundred people who came out last night at King Street Patriots for King Street Live.  I always enjoy my trips to see you all in Houston and met a lot of new folks this time.  Sorry to anyone who didn’t get a copy of Injustice.  I thought there would be plenty given how many we brought, but people seemed to doing Christmas shopping yesterday for friends and family.  If you didn’t get a signed copy and would like one, let one of the folks at King Street know at a Monday night meeting and I will make sure you get it.  Of course if you don’t want it signed, there is a link over on the left hand side of the page (<———).

I will be appearing at the South Texas School of law today at 3:30 p.m.  

Congressional redistricting battlelines in Maryland

 Washington Post has a blow by blow.  One noteworthy part of the article is yet another example where the purportedly nonpartisan League of Women voters has injected themselves into the debate on terms seemingly far removed from their purported purpose.  “The League of Women Voters of Maryland levies harsh criticism of O’Malley’s redistricting plan, saying it goes too far for political gain and will contribute to polarizing Congress for the next decade.”