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Thursday, April 18, 2024 | Back issues
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Seventh Circuit Upholds Same-Day Illinois Voter Registration

The Seventh Circuit on Friday found no evidence that allowing same-day voter registration in large Illinois counties discriminates against voters in small counties, and vacated a preliminary injunction won by a Republican congressional candidate.

CHICAGO (CN) – The Seventh Circuit on Friday found no evidence that allowing same-day voter registration in large Illinois counties discriminates against voters in small counties, and vacated a preliminary injunction won by a Republican congressional candidate.

Republican Illinois congressional candidate and Tea Party leader Patrick Harlan sued the Illinois State Board of Elections in 2016, claiming a state law guaranteeing same-day registration for high-population counties only benefits urban Democrats.

Illinois requires counties with a population of over 100,000 allow citizens to register when voting, but smaller counties don’t have to – and none do because of the cost and logistics involved. Only 20 Illinois counties out of 102 allow same-day registration, but these counties account for 84 percent of the state’s population.

Harlan’s complaint claims the mandate for high-population counties discriminates against the Republican Party and violates the 14th Amendment since urban areas tend to vote for Democrats.

U.S. District Judge Samuel Der-Yeghiayan granted Harlan a preliminary injunction in late September last year, less than two months before Election Day, finding that the current scheme discriminated against rural voters.

But the Seventh Circuit sided with the state election’s board and issued a stay reinstating same-day voter registration for the November election.

On Friday, the Chicago-based appeals court issued its final opinion, again ruling for the state and finding little support for Der-Yeghiayan’s determination that Harlan made a showing of likely success on the merits of his claim.

Harlan’s case rests on research by University of Georgia political scientist M.V. Hood, but the panel said Hood’s testimony “comes nowhere close to demonstrating that Illinois voters would suffer any harm at all - let alone irreparable harm” under the law allowing same-day registration.

“Hood never said, however, which groups of voters – older, younger, rural, urban, ethnic, etc. – are statistically more or less likely to benefit from the same-day option. Hood also provided no information on the question whether Election-Day registration in Illinois’s 20 more heavily populated counties is more likely to increase voter participation than centralized Election-Day registration in the smaller counties. Hood also failed to take early voting into account,” Chief Judge Diane Wood said, writing for the three-judge panel.

In addition, the court noted that Harlan did not file a single affidavit from a small county resident who claims they would have voted had they been allowed to register on a past Election Day.

“Even though P.A. 98-1171 does not force quite as many options on the smaller counties as it does on the 20 largest counties, it permits every county to adopt the default same-day rules, and it provides realistic same-day options even in the smaller places,” Wood said. “This, coupled with the lack of any data about which groups are disadvantaged and how, dooms the injunction.”

Categories / Appeals, Civil Rights, Regional

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