The topic of conversation for this Constitution Monday concerns the need for judges who make their decisions according to the Constitution. It is essential for judges to follow the law in all cases. Otherwise, there are two systems of justice in our nation, and the world seems like it has been turned up-side-down.
When COVID-19 came to our nation, government
officials at all levels were forced to respond to the pandemic. Some of them
responded in a way that would strengthen the people that they represent, and
others not so much. Zack Smith and Hans von Spakovsky posted an article about
our up-side-down world at The Daily Signal. They wrote that even people “who
mean well need to be reminded that our Constitution contains no ‘pandemic
exception’.”
Federal judges need that reminder, too.
For example, on Oct. 12, three Trump-appointed judges from the 5th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals made this exact point when they dissolved a
federal district court’s order that would have allowed Texas counties to place
multiple, unmonitored absentee ballot drop boxes in unsecured locations, in
violation of state law.
Fifth Circuit Judge Kyle Duncan, writing
for himself, and Judges Don Willett and Jim Ho – all three of whom have been
mentioned as potential Supreme Court nominees – stayed a lower court ruling
that claimed that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s order, which limited ballot drop
boxes to “a single early-voting clerk’s office location [in each county],” was
unconstitutional.
The three judges found that the governor’s
proclamation “abridges no one’s right to vote.”
Instead of limiting opportunities
for people to vote, the three judges noted that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott had “expanded
the options available for Texans to vote in-person or to vote by absentee
ballot.” Proclamations made by the governor opened the polls a week earlier,
expanded the length of time to hand deliver mail-in ballots, and kept the
option to mail in the ballots.
The
appellate court did not see any burden that the governor’s proclamations were
placing on the voters.
As noted, Gov. Abbott has taken unprecedented
steps in the wake of COVID-19 to expand voting opportunities generally, and
mail-in voting options specifically. In taking these (and other)
pandemic-driven actions, the governor has invoked his broad emergency powers
under the Texas Disaster Act….
Neither the United States nor Texas
constitution includes a pandemic exception…. All public servants, no matter how
well-intentioned, must heed federal and state constitutional constraints.
Texans should be grateful for judges
that can read the national and state constitutions and can interpret them as
written. We need more judges just like them!
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