Current:Home > MyMontana Supreme Court allows signatures of inactive voters to count on ballot petitions -ProWealth Academy
Montana Supreme Court allows signatures of inactive voters to count on ballot petitions
View
Date:2025-04-15 07:37:45
HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Montana’s Supreme Court on Tuesday said it would allow the signatures of inactive voters to count on petitions seeking to qualify constitutional initiatives for the November ballot, including one to protect abortion rights.
District Court Judge Mike Menahan ruled last Tuesday that Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen’s office wrongly changed election rules to reject inactive voter signatures from three ballot initiatives after the signatures had been turned in to counties and after some of the signatures had been verified. The change to longstanding practices included reprogramming the state’s election software.
Jacobsen’s office last Thursday asked the Montana Supreme Court for an emergency order to block Menahan’s ruling that gave counties until this Wednesday to verify the signatures of inactive voters that had been rejected. Lawyers for organizations supporting the ballot initiatives and the Secretary of State’s Office agreed to the terms of the temporary restraining order blocking the secretary’s changes.
Justices said Jacobsen’s office failed to meet the requirement for an emergency order, saying she had not persuaded them that Menahan was proceeding under a mistake of law.
“We further disagree with Jacobsen that the TRO is causing a gross injustice, as Jacobsen’s actions in reprogramming the petition-processing software after county election administrators had commenced processing petitions created the circumstances that gave rise to this litigation,” justices wrote.
A hearing on an injunction to block the changes is set for Friday before Menahan.
The groups that sued — Montanans Securing Reproductive Rights and Montanans for Election Reform — alleged the state for decades had accepted signatures of inactive voters, defined as people who filed universal change-of-address forms and then failed to respond to county attempts to confirm their address. They can restore their active voter status by providing their address, showing up at the polls or requesting an absentee ballot.
Backers of the initiative to protect the right to abortion access in the state constitution said more than enough signatures had been verified by Friday’s deadline for it to be included on the ballot. Backers of initiatives to create nonpartisan primaries and another to require a candidate to win a majority of the vote to win a general election have said they also expect to have enough signatures.
veryGood! (42617)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Viral video of manatee's living conditions feels like a 'gut punch,' sparks relocation from Florida facility
- He changed television forever. Why we all owe thanks to the genius of Norman Lear.
- Why Lenny Kravitz Is Praising Zoë Kravitz's Fiancé Channing Tatum
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Norman Lear, producer of TV’s ‘All in the Family’ and influential liberal advocate, has died at 101
- US military grounds entire fleet of Osprey aircraft following a deadly crash off the coast of Japan
- Taylor Swift caps off massive 2023 by entering her Time Person of the Year era
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Stock market today: Asian shares surge as weak US jobs data back hopes for an end to rate hikes
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Viral video of manatee's living conditions feels like a 'gut punch,' sparks relocation from Florida facility
- Red Hot Chili Peppers cancels show, not performing for 6 weeks due to band member injury
- The Justice Department is investigating the deaths and kidnappings of Americans in the Hamas attack
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Daisy Jones’ Camila Morrone Reveals How Pregnant BFF Suki Waterhouse Will Be as a Mom
- 4 more members of K-pop supergroup BTS to begin mandatory South Korean military service
- France will carry out 10,000 checks at restaurants, hotels before Paris Games to avoid price hikes
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
The Excerpt podcast: Sandra Day O'Connor dies at 93, Santos expelled from Congress
Texas woman asks court for abortion because of pregnancy complications
John Lennon's murder comes back to painful view with eyewitness accounts in Apple TV doc
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Hilarie Burton Says Sophia Bush Was The Pretty One in One Tree Hill Marching Order
Slow down! As deaths and injuries mount, new calls for technology to reduce speeding
Decades after Europe, turning blades send first commercial wind power onto US grid