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The follow­ing is adap­ted from oral testi­mony given Thursday before the United States House Commit­tee on Admin­is­tra­tion.

As you know, the Supreme Court agreed to hear Moore v. Harper, a case in which some North Caro­lina legis­lat­ors have asked the Court to embrace the so-called inde­pend­ent state legis­lature notion. This is the radical claim ("theory" is too gener­ous a term) posit­ing that the Consti­tu­tion removes the normal checks on state legis­latures when they regu­late federal elec­tions.

Even if the Court embraces this radical notion, Congress can thwart many of its worst consequences.

You've already heard that this claim is wrong. Consti­tu­tional text, Amer­ican history, Supreme Court preced­ent, sound policy, and common sense all refute the idea.

I'll focus on the crush­ing consequences for Amer­ican voters and our multiracial demo­cracy if the Supreme Court turns this fringe notion into law. Here are four examples of what this idea could allow.

First, the notion would green­light partisan gerry­man­der­ing of congres­sional districts.

Secondthe radical claim would remove constraints on voter suppres­sion.

Third, the notion would create elec­tion chaos, disen­fran­chising voters and over­whelm­ing elec­tion offi­cials. 

Fourth, the notion would remove crit­ical checks against elec­tion inter­fer­ence and sabot­age. 

To be clear, the inde­pend­ent state legis­lature claim is not a license to coup. Federal law prohib­its state legis­latures from over­turn­ing the results of an elec­tion. But the notion would open the door to anti­demo­cratic shenanigans. And even failed efforts to manip­u­late elec­tions erode trust—and, ulti­mately, parti­cip­a­tion—in our demo­cracy. 

Even if the Court embraces this radical notion, Congress can thwart many of its worst consequences. The Elec­tions Clause, the very same consti­tu­tional provi­sion that activ­ists seek to weapon­ize against demo­cracy, gives Congress the power to enhance and protect voting rights and ensure fair repres­ent­a­tion.

That's why, regard­less of how the Supreme Court rules, I urge you to revisit and pass the Free­dom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act. The bill would set national stand­ards for voting access, prohibit partisan gerry­man­der­ing, and add federal protec­tions against elec­tion inter­fer­ence and sabot­age. This legis­la­tion is crit­ic­ally needed.


This content originally appeared on Common Dreams - Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community and was authored by Eliza Sweren-Becker.

Citations

[1] The Independent State Legislature Theory and its Potential to Disrupt our Democracy - Hearings - United States Committee on House Administration ➤ https://cha.house.gov/committee-activity/hearings/independent-state-legislature-theory-and-its-potential-disrupt-our