4th Circuit To Weigh Whether NC Supreme Court Election Challenge Should Proceed in State or Federal Court
Mark Elias: This is most important court hearing to watch next week. The GOP does not want this case in federal court because they know a federal judge is not likely to toss out 60,000 lawful votes. Their plan is to have the partisan NC state Supreme Court decide.
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will hold oral argument Monday to weigh whether GOP North Carolina Supreme Court candidate Jefferson Griffins legal bid contesting his 2024 election loss to incumbent Democratic Justice Allison Riggs should proceed in state or federal court. Although Mondays argument wont center on the merits of Griffins challenge to over 60,000 ballots, it will have bearing on the venue in which the dispute plays out a factor that could prove quite consequential for the ultimate outcome of the ongoing legal battle.
The certification of Riggs electoral victory which was confirmed by two recounts currently remains on hold as a result of an order from the majority-Republican state Supreme Court halting final certification of the race. Voting rights advocates have decried the courts willingness to hold up a resolution of the election and consider Griffins attempts to disenfranchise large scores of voters. Back in December, Griffin filed two separate sets of legal challenges one set in Wake County Superior Court, the other directly in the North Carolina Supreme Court seeking to overturn his 734-vote loss to Riggs. The nearly identical legal actions both raise claims against three distinct categories of ballots to which Griffin had unsuccessfully mounted protests before the state board of elections.
The three buckets of ballots challenged by Griffin include those cast by overseas voters who did not submit a copy of their photo IDs, voters who never previously resided in North Carolina and individuals whose voter registrations were allegedly incomplete. Early on in the litigation, the North Carolina State Board of Elections and Riggs removed both sets of cases to federal court, arguing that Griffins post hoc request to change the states voting rules after votes have already been cast and counted would implicate North Carolinians rights under federal law and the U.S. Constitution.
However, Trump-appointed federal Judge Richard Myers sent both actions back down to North Carolina state courts, prompting appeals by the board and Riggs to the 4th Circuit. Mondays 4th Circuit oral argument specifically concerns Griffins case filed directly in the North Carolina Supreme Court. But further complicating the matter is a recent order from the justices dismissing Griffins petition seeking review of his case by North Carolina Supreme Court. In that Jan. 22 order, the justices indicated that Griffins ballot challenges should first proceed in Wake County Superior prior to being reviewed by the state Supreme Court on appeal.
https://www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/4th-circuit-to-weigh-whether-nc-supreme-court-election-challenge-will-proceed-in-state-or-federal-court/