GEORGIA MUSLIM VOTER PROJECT v. Kemp

918 F.3d 1262
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 2019
Docket18-14502-GG; 18-14503-GG
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 918 F.3d 1262 (GEORGIA MUSLIM VOTER PROJECT v. Kemp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GEORGIA MUSLIM VOTER PROJECT v. Kemp, 918 F.3d 1262 (11th Cir. 2019).

Opinions

BY THE COURT:

On November 2, 2018, we denied the Emergency Motion for Stay of Injunction Pending Appeal filed by Appellant Brian Kemp and advised at that time that one judge dissented and separate opinions would follow. Today, we issue those opinions.

JILL PRYOR, Circuit Judge, concurring in the denial of the motion for a stay.

On the eve of the 2018 general election, and in the wake of a surge in interest in voting by mail in Georgia, the Georgia Muslim Voter's Project and Asian-Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta filed suit challenging the State's lack of prerejection procedures for redress when an elector's signature on an absentee ballot application or absentee ballot appears not to match the signature on her voter registration card. For such a perceived mismatch, the State offered only notice of rejection and an opportunity to try again, whether by mail or by voting in person. But for other absentee ballot deficiencies, the State offered a more robust system of prerejection notice and an opportunity to be heard. Finding a likely violation of procedural due process, the district court entered an injunction in which it ordered the Secretary of State of Georgia to instruct county elections officials to provide prerejection notice and an opportunity to be heard in the *1263event of a perceived signature mismatch. In so doing, the district court borrowed heavily from existing voting procedures pertaining to other ballot deficiencies, which had been passed by Georgia's legislature and long followed by state and local officials, to craft a narrow remedy for a narrow class of ballot applications and ballots.

When the Secretary moved in this Court for a stay pending appeal from the injunction, we denied the stay, concluding that the district court had not abused its discretion in crafting the relief it ordered. See Cumulus Media, Inc. v. ClearChannel Commc'ns, Inc. , 304 F.3d 1167, 1171 (11th Cir. 2002) ("[The district court's] judgments, about the viability of a plaintiff's claims and the balancing of equities and the public interest, are the district court's to make and we will not set them aside unless the district court has abused its discretion in making them."). Our order denying the Secretary's motion issued days before the November 2018 election, and in it we noted that opinions would follow. This is my opinion, written as if it had been issued contemporaneously with that order.1

I. BACKGROUND

A. Georgia's Statutory Absentee Voting Scheme

Like many states, Georgia permits electors to vote by mail, for any reason, through a process it calls absentee voting. See O.C.G.A. § 21-2-380(a), (b). Absentee electors must follow a two-step process, first applying for and second voting via an absentee ballot. Id. §§ 21-2-381, -383, -384. At both steps, an absentee elector must sign the application or ballot, and at both steps that signature is compared by elections officials to the elector's voter registration card signature. Id. § 21-2-381(b)(1) (absentee ballot applications); id. §§ 21-2-384(b), (c), - 386(a)(1)(B), (C) (absentee ballots). If the county elections official reviewing submissions concludes that the signatures match at the application stage, an absentee ballot issues; if the signatures match at the absentee ballot stage, and there are no other deficiencies, the absentee elector's vote is counted. Id. § 21-2-381(b)(2)(A) (absentee ballot applications); id. § 21-2-386(a)(1)(B) (absentee ballots). If the official concludes that the signature on the absentee ballot application or absentee ballot does not match that of the elector's voter registration card, then the application or ballot is rejected. Id. § 21-2-381(b)(3) (absentee ballot applications); id. § 21-2-386(a)(1)(C) (absentee ballots). At issue in this case is the process offered to absentee electors whose signatures on absentee ballot applications and absentee ballots are deemed a mismatch.

Georgia law has no provision by which an absentee elector notified of a perceived mismatch may contest the decision, cure the mismatch, or prove her identity before the absentee application or absentee ballot is rejected for a signature mismatch. Instead, the law provides that after the application or ballot is rejected, the county board of registrars2 or absentee ballot *1264clerk is required to "promptly notify" the elector of the rejection. Id. § 21-2-381(b)(3) (absentee ballot applications); id. § 21-2-386(a)(1)(C) (absentee ballots).3 The law does not prevent the absentee elector from trying again, either by filling out a new application or by completing a new ballot. Nor does the law prevent an able absentee elector from voting in person, either during early voting hours or on Election Day. Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 183-1-14-.09.

Still, perceived signature mismatches are a bit of an outlier: Georgia law provides pre rejection procedures for other flaws in absentee ballot applications and absentee ballots, just not for a signature mismatch. If the registrar or absentee ballot clerk determines that an absentee ballot application lacks information such that the official cannot determine the absentee elector's identity, Georgia law provides that the official must "write to request additional information" from the elector instead of rejecting the application outright. O.C.G.A. § 21-2-381(b)(4).

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Bluebook (online)
918 F.3d 1262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-muslim-voter-project-v-kemp-ca11-2019.