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Tennessee Judge Could Be Removed From Bench for Expanding Absentee Voting in 2020

Tennessee Judge Could Be Removed From Bench for Expanding Absentee Voting in 2020 On 3/8/21 at 3:45 PM EST Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle, a Tennessee judge, faces possible removal from her position on the court in Davidson County, where Nashville is located. Republican legislators in the state s House of Representatives are backing a resolution that would dismiss Lyle from the bench over a ruling that partially expanded Tennessee s absentee voting permissions ahead of this past November s general election. Tennessee Representative Tim Rudd, a Republican, introduced the resolution in February, months after Lyle issued a ruling that aimed to broaden the state s mail-in voting policies to include a wider range of residents. Lyle s ruling was eventually overturned by the state Supreme Court. She also pushed to permit remote voting by individuals who carry a higher risk of developing serious health complications from the coronavirus, which the court maintained.

Push to oust judge over absentee vote ruling sparks outcry

Push to oust judge over absentee vote ruling sparks outcry

Push to oust judge over absentee vote ruling sparks outcry
news957.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from news957.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

H R 1: The Path to Democracy in America

H R 1: The Path to Democracy in America
prospect.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prospect.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Using photo ID in British elections will harm democracy, say US civil rights groups

First published on Sun 28 Feb 2021 05.10 EST Plans to force people to show photo ID to take part in UK elections amount to Republican-style voter suppression and are likely to erode faith in the democratic process rather than reinforce it, three leading US civil rights groups have warned. In an intervention that could prove embarrassing to ministers, US groups that were at the frontline of efforts to combat vote-blocking efforts by Donald Trump and his allies, said ID laws disproportionately affected people from poorer and more marginalised communities. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), and Commons Cause said that while they did not campaign directly in the UK it was a common principle that such laws, without evidence of widespread election fraud, had a harmful impact.

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