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Elections are the mechanism through which the people exercise their constitutional sovereignty — and the constitutional framework governing them has never been more contested. The independent state legislature theory, the Purcell Principle, the partisan gerrymandering non-justiciability of Rucho, and Bush v. Gore's equal protection principles all define the constitutional landscape in which election law litigation occurs.
The Constitutional Election Law Warrior is Volume XXXV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series.
Wayne Richard Evangelista covers the full constitutional election law landscape: the right to vote — Reynolds v. Sims, Harper v. Virginia, and the constitutional basis of voter equality; ballot access — the Anderson-Burdick balancing test, voter ID, early voting, and absentee ballot restrictions; racial gerrymandering — Shaw v. Reno, the Gingles framework, and Allen v. Milligan; partisan gerrymandering — Rucho's federal non-justiciability and the role of state courts; the independent state legislature theory — Moore v. Harper; the Purcell Principle; Bush v. Gore's equal protection holding; and election administration constitutional dimensions including signature verification and ballot counting procedures.
The Constitutional Election Law Warrior
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