There’s a MS election law that says a person that votes in the primary for one party’s nominee may not vote in the general for the other party nominee. You think that’s going to stop people from violating the law? How are they stopped? How is the law enforced?
You can ignore the facts as posted in #119. You can hang your hat on Mississippi state laws that don’t matter. The fact is that federal rulings and the MS state law are not in agreement. So the law you think applies does not matter because the federal rulings invalidate it.
Are you that obtuse? - I stated that Mississippi law does not allow it. I was right, you were wrong.
Everything else you are saying has no relevance to that fact.
There is a law. That law stands unless and until it is overturned. It has not been overturned. The law exists, as I stated, and you foolishly challenged.
Your post #119 is nonsense - it supports a claim that the EXISTING law will be overturned, but that is already. It, in fact, PROVES my statement, that such a law does exist.
The law matters, if it did not exist, there would be no need for an injunction.
The federal rulings do NOT invalidate the law. The law must be challenged, and a ruling made, to invalidate it. That has not been done.