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Search resuls for: "Richard Hasen"


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But state officials resisted his pressure, judges tossed out his team’s lawsuits, and Pence defied Trump and carried out his constitutional duty to affirm the result of the vote. If Trump sought to challenge the election results, he would have two potential paths to try to overturn the results, and both routes are “long shots,” said Hasen, director of the Safeguarding Democracy Project at UCLA Law School. Given the heightened security risk, some state officials have made plans to scrap public, high-profile ceremonies to certify election results in state capitols. Election officials across the country also have bolstered security at polling places, including expanding police presence and issuing bulletproof vests to election workers. State officials resisted.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, , Richard Hasen, Trump, Joe Biden, Mike Pence, Pence, Hasen, Gowri Ramachandran, Wisconsin —, Al Schmidt, Matthew Sanderson, , Sanderson, Frank Figliuzzi, ” Figliuzzi, , didn’t, that’s Organizations: U.S . Capitol, UCLA, Count, Trump, Georgia’s, Trump Republicans, UCLA Law School, Elections, Brennan Center for Justice, New York University School of Law, Senate, Electoral, Republican, Electoral College, Washington , D.C, GOP Senators, Capitol, FBI, NBC News, The Department of Homeland Security, United Nations, Assembly Locations: Pennsylvania, Arizona, Wisconsin, Michigan’s Legislature, Washington ,, capitols, Maricopa County , Arizona, Washington
The company behind the game Cards Against Humanity is aiming to one-up Elon Musk with its plan to pay blue-leaning swing-state residents who make voting plans and agree to publicly condemn Donald Trump. On a website created by the game company, eligible voters are asked to provide their personal information, which is then checked against voter data that the company said it bought from a data broker. Cards Against Humanity is also selling a $7.99 card game expansion pack with cards themed to the election. Cards Against Humanity, a popular card game that features offensive and sexually explicit jokes, has increasingly taken a progressive political stance. The Cards Against Humanity website said it is “exploiting a legal loophole.” It also took aim at Musk directly, writing that registered swing-state voters could participate in his PAC's program and list Cards Against Humanity as their referrer — compelling Musk's PAC to send the company money.
Persons: Elon, Donald Trump, , Musk, Richard Hasen, , they’ll, we’ll Organizations: Humanity, company’s, Trump, PAC, UCLA School of, NBC, SpaceX Locations: America, PA, AZ, NC, Texas, U.S, Mexico
Elon Musk’s pro-Trump America PAC is offering people $47 if they successfully get one registered swing-state voter to sign a petition supporting the First and Second Amendments of the Constitution. Both Musk and America PAC have vocally encouraged swing-state voter registration ahead of the mandatory deadlines. Over the weekend, X repurposed the account handle “@america,” which used to belong to a different account, for Musk’s America PAC. The account has since promoted the pro-Constitution petition, swing-state voter registration and the $47 offer. Musk’s America PAC was formed in May and has previously stoked controversy with its unusual tactics to encourage swing-state voter registration.
Persons: Elon Musk’s, ” Musk, Donald Trump, “ I’ve, , Richard Hasen, , ” Hasen, Trump, hadn’t Organizations: Trump America PAC, Republican, America PAC, Musk’s America PAC, UCLA School of Law, NBC, Trump, Facebook, Michigan, NBC News Locations: America, Trump’s, Michigan, North Carolina
The Supreme Court’s conservative majority cleared the way today for South Carolina to keep using a congressional map that a lower court had deemed an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. All three liberal justices dissented. The ruling handed a victory to the state’s Republicans by allowing them to maintain a stronghold on a district in Charleston County. The immediate effect will be limited: This year’s elections were already set to take place under the contested map. In dissent, the liberal justices argued that it could become all but impossible to challenge voting maps as racial gerrymanders.
Persons: Samuel Alito, , Richard Hasen Organizations: voters Locations: South Carolina, Charleston County
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans in Wisconsin are threatening to impeach a recently elected state Supreme Court justice and raised the possibility of doing the same to the state’s election director. A Georgia Republican called for impeaching the Fulton County prosecutor who brought racketeering charges against former President Donald Trump. None of the targets met the bar traditionally set for impeachment — credible allegations of committing a crime while in office. Over the past two years, Republicans also have sought to pry Democrats and nonpartisan executives from office through recalls, legislative maneuvers and forced removals, even when no allegations of wrongdoing have surfaced. They’re upset with her over a legal settlement as voting began in 2020 that eased some rules for mailed ballots during the COVID-19 pandemic beyond what state law permitted.
Persons: Donald Trump, Republicans didn’t, Joe Biden, It’s, , Melissa Agard, Janet Protasiewicz, Ben Wikler, , Robin Vos, we’re, Vos, Larry Krasner, impeaching Krasner, Fani Willis, Georgia’s, Brian Kemp, Sen, Colton Moore, Kemp’s, Ken Paxton, Paxton, Ron DeSantis, DeSantis, They’re, Gavin Newsom, Newsom breezed, Brian Kalt, ” Richard Hasen, ” ___ Bauer, Brooke Schultz Organizations: WASHINGTON, — Republicans, Georgia Republican, Republicans, Pennsylvania House, Congress, Democrat, Republican, Court, GOP, state's Democratic Party, Philadelphia, Democratic, Trump, Republican Gov, Caucus, Texas, Representatives, Justice Department, North Carolina Republicans, Michigan State University, University of California, Associated Press Locations: Wisconsin, Georgia, Fulton, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Fulton County, Florida, California, Los Angeles, Madison , Wisconsin, Harrisburg , Pennsylvania
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court seems a bit quieter than in recent years, as the justices begin a new term. Political Cartoons View All 1190 ImagesSome things to know about the Supreme Court’s new term:GUNS AND ABORTION, REDUXThe justices' decision in June 2022 on guns altered how courts are supposed to evaluate restrictions on firearms. 5TH CIRCUITThe federal appeals court in New Orleans is keeping the Supreme Court busy. Federal judges are weighing various appeals related to the prosecution of Trump in federal courts in Washington and Florida, and state courts in Georgia and New York. The Supreme Court almost always wants the last word in deciding what a provision of the Constitution means.
Persons: Donald Trump, Biden, John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Harlan Crow, Koch, Samuel Alito, Sonia Sotomayor, Brett Kavanaugh, Elana Kagan, Kagan, , TRUMP, Trump, it's, Richard Hasen Organizations: WASHINGTON, Supreme, U.S, Circuit, Appeals, Consumer Financial Protection, Securities, Exchange Commission, University of Notre Dame Locations: United States, New Orleans, Texas, Washington and Florida, Georgia, New York
We also show that formerly covered states were largely indistinguishable from formerly uncovered states in terms of retrogression. If anything, states unaffected by Shelby County retrogressed marginally more than did states impacted by the ruling. If changes in election laws, especially those affecting voter turnout, have little influence on partisan outcomes, why should the average citizen care about these developments? Conversely, even if the laws have only marginal influence on election outcomes, couldn’t that marginal difference become crucial in very close elections? We might think some changes to election laws are simply the right thing to do based on our ethical values.
Persons: Nicholas Stephanopolous, Eric McGhee, Christopher Warshaw, , Richard Hasen, Hersh, ” Marc Elias, Elias, Grimmer, Organizations: Harvard Law School, Public, Institute of California, George Washington University, State Senate, State House, Elias Law Group, Democratic, Republican Locations: County, Arizona, U.C.L.A, Brnovich
Donald Trump’s criminal cases, explained
  + stars: | 2023-06-09 | by ( Zachary B. Wolf | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +14 min
Trump was indicted back in March by the Manhattan district attorney on state charges related to hush-money payments to a former adult-film star in 2016. Smith is also overseeing other investigations related to Trump, including those regarding the January 6, 2021, insurrection and the 2020 election. That federal law deals with the illegal retention of “national defense information,” a broad term that encompasses classified documents and other sensitive government materials. Federal charges related to classified documents likely do not either. But people do routinely serve prison time for retention of classified documents, conspiracy and obstruction.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, He’s, Jack Smith, Trump’s, Trump, Aaron Burr, Wasn’t, isn’t Trump, Smith, Joe Biden’s, Jim Trusty, , Elie Honig, CNN’s Marshall Cohen, CNN’s Evan Perez, Joe Biden, Honig, , Robert Ray, Ray, it’s, David Axelrod, ‘ They’re, , Richard Hasen, don’t, Jean Carroll, We’re, hasn’t, Hasen, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Nixon’s, Spiro Agnew, Agnew, Burr, We’ve, Let’s Organizations: CNN, US Department of Justice, Trump, White, National Archives, Prosecutors, Lago, USC, FBI, DOJ, That’s, Manhattan, Justice Department, Republican, Democratic, University of California, Senate, State, Quinnipiac University, Service Locations: Lago, Miami, Manhattan, Florida, Trump . Miami, Washington, New York, Dade County, Los Angeles, United States, New York City, Fulton County , Georgia, York
In their appeal to the Supreme Court, the Republicans argued that North Carolina's top court usurped their authority by throwing out the map. In that context - a fight over counting ballots in Florida - Rehnquist said the U.S. Constitution limits the authority of state courts. "This court has never second-guessed state court interpretations of their own constitution," said Katyal. Thomas Wolf, an attorney at New York University School of Law's Brennan Center for Justice, said if the Supreme Court gives itself too much leeway to intervene in state court disputes, it risks appearing politically motivated and lawless. The Supreme Court's ruling is due by the end of June.
“Let’s say no to Norma Torres because she has caused so much harm to El Salvador,” one of the many tweets read. The State Department considers this an attempt to influence the elections. You can say someone is interfering with the election, you can call it election interference. El Salvador President Nayib Bukele and his party Nuevas Ideas, or New Ideas, and its allies won the biggest congressional majority in the country’s history. Bukele and Torres met once in 2019 when she was with a congressional delegation visiting El Salvador.
Experts told Reuters there would need to be a determination that such an amendment would apply to the former president. Some on social media said the bill would ban Trump from running for office and becoming president. One user tweeted on Sept. 20: “Liz Cheney (R) and Zoe Lofgren (D) have jointly proposed a bill that would bar Trump from ever becoming president again. The op-ed also does not state that the bill would automatically disqualify Trump from a future election. The Presidential Election Reform Act would not automatically bar Donald Trump from serving again as president if re-elected.
The Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to hear the case of Moore v. Harper in October. Moore v. Harper is a North Carolina case regarding the independent state legislature doctrine and gerrymandering. The review was granted on June 30 with the case to be heard in the Supreme Court session this October. "And it would do so at a time when voting rights are under attack, including at the Supreme Court itself." Conservative Supreme Court justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Clarence Thomas, and Samuel Alito have all endorsed versions of the legal theory in previous court opinions.
Persons: Moore, Harper, , Harper Moore, Robin Hudson, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Timothy K, SCOTUS, Leah Litman, Kate Shaw, Carolyn Shapiro, Brennan, Brett Kavanaugh, Richard Hasen, Cortez Organizations: Service, Republican, Democratic, North Carolina Supreme, General, United States, North Carolina House of, Independent, Washington Post, Supreme, Brennan Center, Justice, Conservative, New York Democrat Locations: North Carolina, North Carolina's, Alexandria
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