Case Summary
LWV Arkansas, Arkansas United, and several individual Arkansans filed a lawsuit in state court, asserting four new election laws enacted by the legislature violated the Arkansas Constitution. Together, the bills shorten the deadline to return absentee ballots in person, require voters’ signatures on their absentee ballot and voter registration applications to match, abolish the use of affidavits in place of voter ID for voters casting a provisional ballot, and forbid anyone who is not a voter from coming within 100 feet of a polling place entrance.
After the 2020 elections, the Arkansas State Legislature enacted four new laws that implemented new restrictions on voting processes.
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Act 736 (“signature matching requirement”) required voters’ signatures on their absentee ballot applications to match those on their voter registration application. The law instructs election officials to reject absentee ballot applications if the signatures on the two forms are not ‘similar.’
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Act 973 (“in-person absentee ballot return deadline”) requires that voters who return their absentee ballots in person to their county clerk’s office must do so by the close of business on the Friday before election day. Previously, voters were allowed to drop their absentee ballot off the day before election day.
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Act 249 (“affidavit repeal") abolishes the option for voters without voter ID to sign an affidavit under penalty of perjury affirming they are eligible to vote when casting a provisional ballot at a polling place. Under Act 249, voters who cast a provisional ballot are required to present valid voter ID to election officials by noon on the Monday after the election. The same requirement also applies to absentee voters voting provisional ballots.
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Act 728 (“voter support ban") forbids any person who is not a voter from coming within one hundred feet of a polling place entrance. Violation of this law potentially carries a fine of up to $2,500 and one year of imprisonment.
The League of Women Voters of Arkansas (LWV Arkansas), Arkansas United, and several Arkansas voters and League members, filed a lawsuit in the Pulaski County Circuit Court. The complaint asserted the four new laws violate the Free and Equal Elections, Equal Protection, and Voter Qualification Clauses of the Arkansas Constitution, as well as the rights of free speech and assembly it guarantees.
On March 24, 2022, the court issued an injunction enjoining the four acts from taking effect. The court found that based on the testimony presented at trial, the acts could potentially disenfranchise Arkansans in several ways. Voters might lack the time, money, and ability to obtain a compliant photo ID for voting. The court also found there was no proof of the fraudulent voting that Act 249 purported to prevent. Act 736’s signature match standard could erroneously disenfranchise otherwise eligible voters, given the lack of training and guidance for those checking signature matching.
The court also found Act 728 violated the Arkansas Constitution’s guarantees of freedom of assembly and speech, ruling defendants failed to present any evidence that giving water or comfort to voters waiting at the specified distance significantly disrupted elections.
Finally, the court ruled Act 973 violated the Arkansas Constitution’s protection of the right to vote. The court found that voters could be confused by the different deadlines, and potentially be faced with mailing their absentee ballot at the last minute, meaning it might arrive too late to be counted, or be forced to vote provisionally in person, defeating the purpose of an absentee ballot.
In response, the defendants appealed to the Arkansas Supreme Court, where litigation is ongoing.
The League is represented in this matter by Perkins Coie LLP.
LWV Timeline
LWV Arkansas files lawsuit in state court
LWV Arkansas and partners file an amended complaint in the Pulaski County Circuit Court.
Court denies motion to dismiss
The court denies defendants’ motion to dismiss, finding the plaintiffs have satisfied standing and that sovereign immunity does not protect officials from courts enjoining acts found to be unlawful.
Court issues permanent injunction against the four acts
After a bench trial in which several League members testified, the court issues an injunction, finding the four acts unconstitutional under the Arkansas Constitution, and permanently forbidding state officials from enforcing them.
Defendants seek emergency stay of the injunction in Arkansas Supreme Court
The defendants file a motion for an emergency stay of the trial court’s order, alleging an injunction would disrupt the coming May 2022 primary election by changing the governing laws less than two months before Election Day.
Arkansas Supreme Court grants emergency stay
The Arkansas Supreme Court grants defendants’ emergency motion for a stay pending appeal in an unsigned order.
Parties file a joint motion to compel completion of the case record
After the court reporter responsible for the case failed to complete the compiling of the case record despite repeated extensions of time, both parties file a joint motion requesting an order that the case be reassigned to another court reporter to complete the record and allow the appeal to proceed.