Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
April 3, 2020
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Tennessee lawmakers have repealed draconian provisions included in a 2019 law that sought to impose criminal penalties and
fines on groups and organizations engaged in voter registration
activity. The law was passed in 2019 following successful efforts by
third-party organizations that worked to register people to vote across
the state during the 2018 midterm election cycle.
Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, issued the following statement in response:
“The
repeal of this law is a recognition that the legislature had
overstepped constitutional boundaries in its attempt to unnecessarily
restrict voter registration activities,” said Kristen Clarke, president
and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under
Law. “We were confident that this would be the outcome from the moment
we first filed suit, even before the ink was dry on the Governor’s
signature on this misbegotten law. The draconian civil and criminal
penalties in the old law, coupled with the vague and unnecessary
limitations on organizations who were trying to do nothing more than
simply help eligible citizens register to vote, would have had a
chilling effect on voter registration activities in Tennessee."
Clarke
continued: "Tennessee’s law was one of the most restrictive voter
suppression measures adopted in recent time. Voter registration is the
hallmark of our democracy and no state should impose barriers and
restrictions that make it harder for people to vote."
The lawsuit,
brought by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, was filed
hours after the Governor Bill Lee signed the bill into law. The law
imposed a host of restrictions on third-party voter registration groups.
It required them to comply with preregistration, training, and
affirmation requirements or face draconian criminal and civil penalties
ranging in the tens of thousands of dollars. The statute sought to
penalize groups for actions of voters who do not satisfy a
vaguely-defined requirement that registration forms be “complete.” The
statute also sought to criminalize “any public communication” made by a
third-party group to a voter about the voter’s registration status if it
is not accompanied by a disclosure that the communication was not
authorized by the Secretary of State.
Along
with the Lawyers’ Committee, the NAACP, pro bono firm Hogan Lovells US
LLP, Memphis-based firm Burch, Porter, & Johnson PLLC, Bromberg Law
LLC, and community practitioner Daniel Ayoade also worked on the
litigation.
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