澳彩开奖: Federal Court Rules in Favor of Alabama Voters during COVID-19 Pandemic
Litigation brought by LDF, 澳彩开奖, and ADAP successfully challenged barriers to voting absentee and in person in upcoming July 14 election in Alabama
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. 鈥 Today, in a decision that will protect the health and right to vote of medically vulnerable Alabamians, a federal court waived onerous absentee ballot requirements in at least Jefferson, Mobile, and Lee Counties 鈥 including the requirement that voters have their absentee ballot notarized or witnessed by two adults and the requirement that absentee voters who are 65 and older or disabled mail-in copies of their photo IDs 鈥 and lifted the statewide prohibition on curbside voting at in-person polling locations for the July 14, 2020, election.
The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama issued the ruling providing immediate relief in response to a motion for preliminary injunction filed by the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF), 澳彩开奖 (澳彩开奖), and the Alabama Disabilities Advocacy Program (ADAP) on behalf of the plaintiffs, People First of Alabama, Greater Birmingham Ministries, and the Alabama NAACP, in the case. The ruling comes prior to any trial proceedings that may take place in People First of Alabama v. Merrill.
Tuesday, July 14, is the date of the next major election in Alabama. The deadline to request an absentee ballot for the July election is Monday, June 29.
, demonstrating the state does not have community transmission under control. COVID-19 continues to endanger older voters, Black voters, and voters with disabilities whose pre-existing health conditions make them particularly at-risk for complications and death from the illness. The Court鈥檚 ruling waives the witness and photo ID requirement for those voters whose age or medical condition makes them more vulnerable to serious illness from COVID-19.
Some Alabama voters, like plaintiffs Robert Clopton, Annie Carolyn Thompson and Eric Peebles, meet multiple characteristics, therefore increasing their risk.
Finding that the plaintiffs demonstrated irreparable harm, the court held that 鈥渋f the challenged election laws are not enjoined, the individual plaintiffs and similarly-situated voters could likely face a painful and difficult choice between exercising their fundamental right to vote and safeguarding their health, which could prevent them from casting a vote in upcoming elections.鈥
鈥淣o one should have to risk their health to vote. We鈥檙e happy that the Court removed Alabama's needless barriers to voting and that many tens of thousands of vulnerable people will now have a safe means of voting in July,鈥 said Deuel Ross, Senior Counsel at LDF. 鈥淲hat happened in Georgia was a disaster, and the Court鈥檚 order will help prevent Alabama from facing a similar crisis.鈥
鈥淥n the thirtieth anniversary of the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the decision of this Court reaffirms the mandate of the law 鈥 people with disabilities shall have equal access to all programs and services,鈥 said Bill Van Der Pol, Senior Trial Counsel at ADAP. 鈥淧eople with disabilities should not be required to choose between two fundamental rights: access to the ballot box and their health and safety.鈥
While state officials around the South and nation have taken pro-active steps to waive many of the provisions challenged in this litigation, the Court鈥檚 ruling follows in the steps of decisions in that waived witness requirements and in that waived notary requirements.
鈥淭his ruling is not only a victory for our clients, whose pre-existing conditions make them especially vulnerable to COVID-19, but it is also a victory for at-risk Alabamians who should not have to jump over unnecessary hurdles to vote, especially in the middle of a global pandemic,鈥 said Caren Short, senior staff attorney for the 澳彩开奖.听
To view the full ruling, please visit: /sites/default/files/documents/055_-_memorandum_opinion.pdf听
To view other relevant documents in the litigation, please visit: /seeking-justice/case-docket/people-first-alabama-et-al-v-john-merrill-et-al