Edward B. Foley | April 21, 2020 | Election Administration
This article was originally published by Medium.com on April 12, 2021. The United States holds genuine elections, not sham ones. That’s what distinguishes this country from Putin’s Russia and other authoritarian regimes. Or at least it has ever since the Voting Rights...
Franita Tolson and Edward B. Foley | April 15, 2020 | Election Administration
Why was there in-person voting in Wisconsin during a once-in-a-lifetime pandemic? Was the election legitimate? In this podcast episode of Free and Fair with Franita and Foley, election scholars Ned Foley and Franita Tolson analyze the partisanship and polarization...
Amy Howe | April 6, 2020 | Election Administration
This article was published on SCOTUSblog.com on April 5, 2020.One day after Wisconsin Republicans asked the Supreme Court to block a lower-court ruling that extended the deadline for voters to submit absentee ballots in the state’s primary election, Wisconsin...
Edward B. Foley, Steven F. Huefner, Jennifer Morinigo and Pauline Toboulidis | March 18, 2020 | Election Administration
In 2019, The American Law Institute published Principles of the Law, Election Administration: Non-Precinct Voting and Resolution of Ballot-Counting Disputes. Part I, Early In-Person Voting and Open Absentee Voting, provides principles for use by jurisdictions that...
Steven F. Huefner | December 10, 2018 | Election Administration
Bladen County, North Carolina, provides the latest object lesson for anyone genuinely interested in improving American elections. Each day this past week brought a new revelation about apparent absentee ballot fraud there, fraud that appears increasingly likely to...