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Tuesday, April 23, 2024 | Back issues
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Seventh Circuit Rejects Bid to Extend Voting Rights to Territories

Residents of Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands have no right to vote absentee in their former state of residence, the Seventh Circuit ruled Thursday, even though residents of the Northern Mariana Islands and some in American Samoa are granted that privilege.

CHICAGO (CN) – Residents of Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands have no right to vote absentee in their former state of residence, the Seventh Circuit ruled Thursday, even though residents of the Northern Mariana Islands and some in American Samoa are granted that privilege.

“Absent a constitutional amendment, only residents of the 50 states have the right to vote in federal elections,” U.S. Circuit Judge Daniel Manion wrote for a three-judge panel. “The plaintiffs have no special right simply because they used to live in a state.” (Emphasis in original.)

American astronauts in space have a special procedure allowing them to vote, and American citizens living abroad can vote absentee, but 5 million residents of U.S. territories currently cannot vote for president and have no voting representation in Congress.

The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of this system, finding that territory residents have no protected right to vote because the territories are “not a part” of the U.S.

But by a strange quirk, the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act requires all states to allow former residents currently living in the Northern Mariana Islands to vote via absentee ballot. Illinois extends this right to former residents living in American Samoa.

However, former residents of U.S. states living in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, or Puerto Rico are not allowed to vote absentee in federal elections.

Six former Illinois residents living in these territories filed suit over this allegedly arbitrary distinction between the territories, seeking the right to cast absentee ballots in their former state. The plaintiffs are represented by We the People, a nonprofit dedicated to expanding voting rights in the territories.

The Seventh Circuit dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims rooted in federal law for lack of jurisdiction, ruling that federal law does not bar territory residents from voting absentee in their former state of residence.

“Federal law requires Illinois to provide absentee ballots for its former residents living in the Northern Mariana Islands, but it does not prohibit Illinois from providing such ballots to former residents in Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. State law could provide the plaintiffs the ballots they seek; it simply doesn’t,” Manion wrote. “To be sure, federal law could have required Illinois to provide the plaintiffs absentee ballots. But that does not render federal law the cause of the plaintiffs’ injuries.” (Emphasis in original.)

The court outright rejected the plaintiffs’ challenge to the Illinois statute.

“While the distinction among United States territories may seem strange to an observer today, it made more sense when Illinois enacted the challenged definition,” according to the 12-page opinion.

In 1979, both American Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands were trust territories rather than fully incorporated U.S. territories, and it made sense to treat them as foreign countries for the purpose of absentee voting, the court found.

“Our conclusion that the Illinois definition was rational in 1979 controls the outcome,” Manion said.

The judge also echoed the Second Circuit’s stated concern that extending rights to some residents of the territories, but not residents born there, would create a class of “super citizens” who can vote for president, while others cannot.

“The natural result…would be to treat all the territories as part of the United States, so that residing in a territory would give one the rights to participate in territorial elections, but not federal elections in one’s former state of residence,” Manion said.

This result would strip residents of the Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoa of the right to vote absentee in federal elections, but would be more consistent.

“Until that happens, however, we see no reason to require Illinois to extend voting rights to its former residents living in Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands,” the judge wrote.

Manion was joined on the Seventh Circuit panel by U.S. Circuit Judges Ilana Rovner and David Hamilton.

Categories / Appeals, Government, National

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