After the U.S. Supreme Court returns from summer break, it will hear Moore v. Harper, a case that emerged out of North Carolina’s latest redistricting cycle.
The case saw the state Supreme Court’s Democratic majority reject voting maps drawn by the state’s Republican-led General Assembly.
The case could potentially give state legislatures nationwide control over their states’ elections and upend future federal elections.
Just in: In an election case out of North Carolina, SCOTUS agrees to review the "independent state legislature" theory next term. Under that theory, state legislatures have broad power to set rules for federal elections, even if state courts say those rules are unconstitutional.
— SCOTUSblog (@SCOTUSblog) June 30, 2022
Excerpted
C Engelbrecht - Mules Tracked To NGO’s, Evidence Building, Constitutional Sheriffs Are In Position
What is that going to do to the states that didn’t consult their legislatures, and let the judiciary and executive branches set election law?
“The case could \potentially\ >>give state legislatures nationwide control over their states’ elections<< and upend future federal elections.”
One must assume that a neoCommunist sympathizer-journalist wrote this line.