Arizona Supreme Court Rejects Challenges From The Enemies Of Democracy To Three Citizens Initiaitives (Updated)

Color me surprised, shocked in fact. In a series of per curiam decisions the Arizona Supreme Court rejected challenges from the enemies of democracy to two citizens initiatives, and sent the third back to the trial court for a final determination of the number of qualified signatures. It may be that all three citizens intiatives will now appear on the ballot.

The Associated Press reports, Arizona Supreme Court rejects challenges to 2 initiatives:

Advertisement

The Arizona Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected challenges to two voter initiatives filed for November’s ballot, one already certified for the ballot and a second that appears likely to make it when a final signature verification is complete.

A challenge to a third measure measure expanding voting access and rolling back restrictions enacted by the Republican-controlled Legislature was mainly rejected by the Supreme Court. But several challenges to lower court rulings on signatures split for each side and the court sent it to back to a trial court. It may not have enough qualifying signatures. [It may also have enough qualifying signatures.]

Opponents, mainly [right-wing anti-democracy] business groups, argued that paid petition circulators for all three measures failed to comply with the law because they did not file affidavits certifying they met legal requirements each time they told the secretary of state they would gather needed signatures for a particular initiative.

Backers of the measures said they followed the rules set out by the secretary of state’s office for registrations and that the secretary’s online portal does not allow more than one affidavit to be filed.

Lower courts said only one affidavit was required. But Gov. Doug Ducey and the opponents of the measures disagreed and asked the Supreme Court to throw out any petitions gathered by people who collected signatures for more than one initiative but filed only one affidavit.

In brief orders rejecting the challenges, Chief Justice Robert Brutinel said the law does in fact require a new certification for each initiative. But the seven justices said that because the secretary of state’s system did not allow it, they would not reject the petitions because it would impede the constitutional right of the people to write their own laws.

“The Court unanimously declines to find that the initiative committee … or any individual circulator failed to comply with (the law) when the SOS has prevented such compliance,” Brutinel wrote. “A finding of non-compliance and disqualification of circulator signatures on this record and under these circumstances would “unreasonably hinder or restrict” the exercise of the initiative power under … the Arizona Constitution.”

This is a sharp rebuke to Gov. Ducey and Republican leaders in the legislature, Governor wants high court to toss 3 Arizona initiatives, “Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey and the GOP leaders of the state House and Senate are urging the state Supreme Court to overrule lower court judges and block three voter initiatives from the ballot”, and their proxy Scott Mussi at the Arizona Free Enterprise Club.

Per Curiam Decision and Order for the Predatory Debt Collection Protection Act initiative. (Secretary of State: Qualified for ballot).

Per Curiam Decision and Order for the Voters’ Right to Know Act initiative. (Secretary of State: Qualified for ballot).

Per Curiam Decision and Order for the Arizonans for Free And Fair Elections initiative. (Secretary of State: Pending).

Former Attorney General Terry Goddard, who has worked for years to get the “Voters Right to Know” measure on the ballot, applauded the ruling.

“Justice prevailed. I’m delighted,” Goddard said. “And they did what we hoped they would do, which is to say the logic says that there should have been an affidavit each time, but you can’t hold someone to a standard that it’s impossible to comply with.”

The three rulings said the court has “every expectation” that the secretary of state’s office will fix the circulator registration portal so that it accepts a new affidavit for each initiative someone wants to collect signatures.

The court also rejected a challenge to a lower court’s ruling that said circulators that lived in multi-unit housing must list their unit number on their petitions and other forms.

The Voters Right to Know measure is the only one that still awaits certification of the qualifying signatures turned in by backers by county recorders and the secretary of state. But Goddard said that 13 of 15 counties have completed their reviews and about 80% of the signatures were deemed valid, a high margin that will easily get the initiative on the ballot if the final two counties come in anywhere near that rate.

The justices also rejected a challenge to the 100-word summary voters saw when they signed petitions to get the Predatory Debt Collection Protection Act on the ballot. Opponents had argued the last sentence that said it did not change laws related to secured debt was misleading.

“The summary, when read as a whole, is not objectively false or misleading,” Brutinel wrote.

The initiative would raise the amount of a home’s value shielded from creditors under the “homestead exemption” from $150,000 to $400,000, and boosts the value of vehicles, cash and other possessions shielded from creditors. It also caps interest rates on medical debts and adds yearly inflation adjustments.

The Free and Fair Elections measure hangs by a shoestring despite the high court’s ruling. Its fate is tied to how a final signature count is tallied after the high court said some that were rejected should be counted and some accepted should be rejected.

Initiatives must have 238,000 valid signatures to make the ballot.

A lower court judge is still wrestling with challenges to some of its qualifying signatures and will now have additional work based on the Supreme Court’s ruling.

Attorney Jim Barton, who represents the committee backing the election measure, said it will take until Thursday to know the outcome, “but the Committee is hopeful that this means we stay on the ballot.”

Initiative signatures and documents are weighed by judges under a “strict compliance” legal standard the GOP-controlled Legislature and Ducey put in place in 2017. GOP lawmakers said it was needed because once an initiative is enacted it is nearly impossible for the Legislature to change it. The change made it easier to throw them out for relatively minor paperwork errors.

Essentially nullifying your constitutional right to citizens intiaitives and referendums by creating ticky-tack requirements to trip you up, i.e., Jim Crow 2.0 voter suppression.

UPDATE: 






Advertisement

Discover more from Blog for Arizona

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

3 thoughts on “Arizona Supreme Court Rejects Challenges From The Enemies Of Democracy To Three Citizens Initiaitives (Updated)”

  1. The Associated Press reports, “Ruling keeps Arizona voting access measure on the ballot”, https://apnews.com/article/elections-arizona-voting-phoenix-69f8224d84e2e97614846f79e8a1fc76

    A judge ruled Thursday that an Arizona initiative expanding voting access and rolling back a host of restrictions enacted by the Republican-controlled Arizona Legislature and GOP Gov. Doug Ducey will be on the November ballot, barring a successful appeal to the state Supreme Court, which ordered the judge to explain his ruling.

    Backers of the Free and Fair Elections measure barely squeaked by after opponents succeeded in disqualifying more than 96,000 signatures. That left the initiative with just 2,281 more than the required 237,645 signatures needed to make the ballot.

    The ruling from Maricopa County Superior Court judge Joseph Mikitish came after three weeks of furious court action as backers of the election measure and two other initiatives tried to fend off challenges that the Legislature and Ducey have made far easier to win.

    [T]he high court’s ruling in the Free and Fair Elections case mainly rejected opponents’ arguments over qualifying signatures, but several challenges to lower court rulings on signatures split for each side.

    The court sent it back to Mikitish to consider those rulings and do the final math to determine if backers have enough signatures. He released that ruling at midday Thursday and ordered Secretary of State Katie Hobbs to keep the measure on the ballot.

    RUH-ROH ….

    The Supreme Court said in its Thursday night order that it could not tell exactly how Mikitish came to his conclusion on the number of valid signatures. It ordered him to provide more details by midday Friday.

    The Arizona Free Enterprise Club, the pro-business group that challenged the initiative, had appealed the new ruling.

    Stacy Pearson, a spokeswoman for the group backing the initiative, said she doubts the court will intervene.

    “Yes, there is still one more procedural hurdle, but if we were in the position to have to appeal that would just be performative rather than judicial,” Pearson said. “So we’re very confident the Supreme Court will (uphold) the fair ruling that was based on good law and good math.”

    The Free and Fair Elections measure changes a slew of election laws. It specifically blocks the Legislature from overturning the results of presidential elections, an avenue some Republicans explored after former President Donald Trump’s loss in the state in 2020.

    It also guarantees ballot privacy and bars handing election materials or ballots over to outside groups like the state Senate did after 2020, expands voting access, mandates that all voters can go to any polling site, extends early voting and limits lobbyists’ ability to wine and dine lawmakers.

    “The single most important component in this initiative is that it prevents the Legislature from overturning the results of an election,” Pearson said. “And, it prevents Cyber Ninjas in green shirts from spinning around ballots on Lazy Susan tables again, and making a mockery of Arizona’s extraordinarily safe and secure election process.”

    The measure also would eliminate the “strict compliance” legal standard that led Mikitish to disqualify many of the petition sheets. The GOP-controlled Legislature required that standard for initiatives in 2017, making it easier to throw them out for relatively minor paperwork errors.

  2. Also surprised. Pleasantly. Maybe they are sewing seeds to use against Secretary of State Hobbs for not having all materials necessary to meet the ridiculous extra conditions from the legislature.

  3. The Free and Fair Elections Act is cleared for the ballot, qualifying with 2,281 more signatures than required. All three cirizensintatves arenowon the November ballot.

    Now you need to sign petitions for the referendum against school voucher expansion and get that qualified for the ballot.

Comments are closed.