The Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to take up an emergency challenge from Virginia, temporarily halting a federal judge’s decision that ordered it to reinstate hundreds of potential noncitizens to the state’s voter rolls.
The decision is a victory for Gov. Glenn Youngkin and comes just days after the state of Virginia filed an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court to halt a lower court decision ordering it to restore the names of some 1,600 individuals to its voter rolls.
“We are pleased by the Supreme Court’s order today,” Youngkin told Fox News in a statement following the decision, which he described as a “victory for commonsense and election fairness.”
“I am grateful for the work of Attorney General Jason Miyares on this critical fight to protect the fundamental rights of U.S. citizens,” he added.
At the heart of the case is whether Virginia’s voter removal process violates a so-called quiet period under the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA), or a federal law requiring states to halt all “systematic” voter roll maintenance for a 90-day period before a federal election.
That argument pitted the Department of Justice — which sued the state over its removal program earlier this month — against Youngkin, who insisted the state’s process is “individualized” and conducted in accordance with state and federal law.
Justice Department officials reiterated their argument Wednesday following the Supreme Court decision.
“The Department brought this suit to ensure that every eligible American citizen can vote in our elections,” they told Fox News in a statement. “We disagree with the Supreme Court’s order.”
With just days until the election, the court’s decision is expected to be under the microscope.
Virginia’s voter roll maintenance program was implemented in August and compares the state Department of Motor Vehicles’ list of self-identified noncitizens to its list of registered voters. Individuals without citizenship were flagged and informed that their voter registration would be canceled unless they could prove their citizenship in 14 days.
The Justice Department argued that the removals were conducted too close to the Nov. 5 elections and violated the NVRA’s quiet period provision, a decision backed by a U.S. judge in Alexandria, who ordered Virginia last week to halt its removals and to reinstate the registrations of all 1,600 removed individuals.
Justice Department officials also cited concerns in their lawsuit that eligible votes may have incorrectly been removed from the rolls without adequate notice or with enough time to correct the mistake.
In the state’s petition to the Supreme Court, Virginia Attorney General Jason S. Miyares objected to the lawsuit and subsequent court ruling on several grounds. First, he argued the NVRA does not extend to “self-identified noncitizens” in the state – adopting a more narrow reading of the law than the Justice Department and one that he said could render the primary basis for the lawsuit obsolete.
Second, he argued that if the NVRA does apply, the state still has an “individualized process” of removing voters that is conducted by the Department of Motor Vehicles and directly by local registration offices.
Late Monday, attorneys general from all 26 Republican-led states joined Virginia in filing an amicus brief to the Supreme Court, backing its assertion that the removal program was conducted on an “individualized” basis, and further, that the Justice Department’s reading of the protections granted under NVRA are overly broad and do not apply to noncitizens.
Attorneys urged the court to grant Virginia’s emergency motion and “restore the status quo,” noting that doing so “would comply with the law and enable Virginia to ensure that noncitizens do not vote in the upcoming election.”
“This Court should reject Respondents’ effort to change the rules in the middle of the game and restore the status quo ante,” they wrote. “The Constitution leaves decisions about voter qualifications to the people of Virginia. And the people of Virginia have decided that noncitizens are not permitted to vote.”
Every state needs to clear up noncitizens off the voter rolls RIGHT NOW before we get outvoted by ILLEGAL CRIMINALS.
The problem with the ruling is that it should of been 9-0 but was 6-3 meaning the liberal judges still think that illegals should interfere in the election. If Kamala wins it would be 9-0 but all in favor of illegals which is why they want a liberal majority. She should be hung for treason for even suggesting such a thing that goes against federal law.
Seems like common sense to remove individuals not eligible to vote. Its a pity SCOTUS is involved, after all, the constitution is clear on this issue.
GET THE FREELOADERS OUT……………THEY’RE HERE FOR THE “FREE STUFF”…………….DEMS BRIBING IN EXCHANGE FOR VOTES………………There are existing laws already on the books regarding immigration, complete with yearly quotas. The immigration policy was never broken, Dems just trying to force a change, …………..THE DC “COUNTRY CLUB HAS GOT TO GO”. They need to be governed by the same laws as We the Deplorables, I mean, We the Garbage Supporters, Duh, “you know the thing”……………….We the People, Joe
The voter rolls in all states should have been purged long ago, with special attention to non-citizens being registered to vote and the reason Kamala and her Democrats have ignored/refused to close our southern border. They want a dominant one party system and Supreme Court stacking so they can codify abortion into our Constitution and never have to run for election, ever again. Open border has allowed in dangerous threats to our country/citizens, causing unimaginable damage that has already manifested in many deaths and huge massive threats to our national security. Kamala wants to inflict more of this – on U.S..