Current:Home > ContactRepublican lawmakers in Pennsylvania challenge state, federal actions to boost voter registration -Momentum Wealth Path
Republican lawmakers in Pennsylvania challenge state, federal actions to boost voter registration
View
Date:2025-04-14 20:44:13
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A group of conservative state lawmakers in Pennsylvania filed a federal lawsuit Thursday challenging three voting-related executive branch actions designed to boost voter registration, including a 2021 executive order by President Joe Biden.
The lawsuit is expected to be one of many to litigate voting and election rules in a battleground state that is critical to 2024’s presidential contest. In the 2020 election, Trump’s campaign, state officials, the Democratic Party and others fought over the rules for mail-in voting, and Trump later baselessly smeared the election as rife with fraud and tried unsuccessfully to overturn it.
The lawsuit, filed by 24 Republican state lawmakers, challenges the legality of a 2021 executive order by Biden that orders federal agencies to consider ways to expand access to registering to vote and information about voting.
It also challenges two state-level actions. One is last fall’s introduction of automatic voter registration in Pennsylvania by Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro. The other is a 2018 state directive under then-Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf. That directive said that counties cannot reject a voter registration application solely on the basis of finding that the applicant submitted a driver’s license number or Social Security number digits that don’t match what is in a government agency database.
The three actions needed — but never received — legislative approval, or conflict with existing law, the lawsuit contends.
Biden’s executive order has been the subject of lawsuits and letters from conservative officials and organizations seeking information about federal agency plans under it. Republican state attorneys general and secretaries of state have asked Biden to rescind it.
The Brennan Center for Justice last year called Biden’s executive order “one of the most substantial undertakings by any administration to overcome barriers to voting.”
The U.S. Justice Department declined comment on the lawsuit. Shapiro’s administration said in a statement that it is “frivolous” to suggest that it lacks the authority to implement automatic voter registration.
“This administration looks forward to once again defending our democracy in court against those advancing extreme, undemocratic legal theories,” Shapiro’s administration said.
The Shapiro administration in September instituted automatic voting, under which prompts on the computer screens in driver’s license centers take the user to a template to register to vote. That leaves it up to the user to choose not to register. Previously, prompts on the computer screen first asked users whether they wanted to register to vote.
Twenty-three other states and Washington, D.C., already have varying models of what is called “ automatic voter registration,” according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Still, former President Donald Trump has already accused Democrats of " trying to steal " Pennsylvania in 2024’s election through automatic voter registration.
In the 2020 election, Trump and his allies went to court repeatedly to overturn Biden’s victory and relentlessly criticized election-related decisions by the state’s Democratic-majority Supreme Court.
Many of the lawmakers on Thursday’s lawsuit have sued previously to invalidate the state’s vote-by-mail law, voted to contest the 2020 presidential election or protested the certification of the 2020 election for Biden.
___
Follow Marc Levy: http://twitter.com/timelywriter
veryGood! (78552)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Soon to be a 2-time Olympic host city, Salt Lake City’s zest for the Games is now an outlier
- EU lawmakers will decide on migration law overhaul, hoping to deprive the far-right of votes
- Kristen Stewart's Fiancée Dylan Meyer Proves Their Love Is Forever With Spicy Message
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- A bill passed by Kansas lawmakers would make it a crime to coerce someone into an abortion
- National, state GOP figures gather in Omaha to push for winner-take-all elections in Nebraska
- Our way-too-early men's basketball Top 25 for 2024-25 season starts with Duke, Alabama
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Mom left kids for dead on LA freeway after she committed murder, cops believe
Ranking
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- 18-year-old in Idaho planned to attack more than 21 churches on behalf of ISIS, feds say
- Man convicted of killing 6-year-old Tucson girl sentenced to natural life in prison
- Watch this soccer fan's reaction to a surprise ticket to see Lionel Messi
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Former assistant principal charged with child neglect in case of 6-year-old boy who shot teacher
- Searching for Tommy John: Sizing up the key culprits in MLB's elbow injury epidemic
- 'Chucky' Season 3, Part 2: Release date, cast, where to watch and stream new episodes
Recommendation
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
'You failed as parents:' Families of teens killed in Michigan mass shooting slam Crumbleys
Arkansas hires John Calipari to coach the Razorbacks, a day after stepping down from Kentucky
Why Sam Taylor-Johnson Says It Took Years to Regain Confidence After Directing Fifty Shades
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
Videos show Chicago police fired nearly 100 shots over 41 seconds during fatal traffic stop
Scientists Are Studying the Funky Environmental Impacts of Eclipses—From Grid Disruptions to Unusual Animal Behavior
Judge rules that Ja Morant acted in self-defense when he punched teenager