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Opinion column is signed by 57 Republican members of the Montana Legislature
"The Legislature shall provide by law the requirements for residence, registration, absentee voting, and administration of elections." It doesn't get much clearer than that line in Article IV, Section 3 of Montana's Constitution.
Unless of course you're an activist judge who doesn't like common sense laws duly passed by the people's representatives, the democratically elected Legislature. In that case, you'll just go ahead and block those laws in favor of your political allies, exactly as District Court Judge Michael Moses did recently.
The laws in question are entirely reasonable and are supported by Montanans throughout the state. One of them requires voter identification to ensure that a person seeking to vote in an election is eligible to do so because they're indeed a citizen and a resident of Montana. The new law requires photo ID with a Montana address. Or, alternatively, you can use a photo ID without an address but also supply other proof of address. If even that doesn't work, you can sign an affidavit and still vote, but that vote can then be checked for eligibility and thrown out if the person isn't a legal voter.
The other three laws in question move the voter registration deadline to noon the day before the election, prohibit partisan political operatives from being paid to harvest ballots, and prohibit people from receiving ballots until they've met the age and residency requirements to be eligible to vote.
Democrats don't like these sensible laws for some reason, but the laws are completely within the bounds of Montana's Constitution, further secure our elections, and don't prevent any eligible registered voter from exercising their fundamental constitutional right to vote. Which is why Judge Moses's recent ruling is so infuriating and so outside the bounds of our constitutional separation of powers.
Barely a month before ballots go out for the June primary, Judge Moses unilaterally blocked all these commonsense laws at the request of the Montana Democratic machine. His ruling hardly even touched on legal, constitutional analysis, let alone Article IV, Section 3 of the Constitution. Instead, he engaged mostly in a "he said, she said" debate between the parties in the lawsuit over whether they like the new laws or not.
In such a flimsy ruling, it's no surprise that Moses sided with the activist liberals. He was originally appointed to the bench by a Democratic governor. Every partisan donation his household has made, over $1,500 in total, has gone to Democrats.
We have a lot of good judges in Montana who are committed to fulfilling their strictly judicial roles as required by the separation of powers in our Constitution. Unfortunately, we also have way too many activist judges who let their political and policy views cloud their decisions on the bench.
To them we say: if you want to go beyond assessing constitutionality, and instead express your own views of what's good or bad policy, if you want to change the law to fit your political preferences, if you want to advocate for policies, then run for the Legislature. That's what we all did. The Legislature is the policymaking branch of government, not the judiciary. Your job is to interpret the laws. If you want to write them, or get rid of the ones you don't like, you're in the wrong office.
For too long, our part-time, citizen Legislature and the people of Montana haven't paid enough attention to what's been going on within Montana's judicial branch of government. That's over now. Judges are always happy to tell others when they're in the wrong, but too many don't want the same accountability for themselves. Keep political activism out of our courts. Respect the separation of powers guaranteed under our Constitution. Judge Moses's unjustifiable activist ruling needs to be overturned immediately.
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This opinion column is signed by 57 Republican members of the Legislature, including all House and Senate leadership, the sponsors of the four blocked election laws, the chairs of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, the chairs of the House and Senate State Administration Committees, and all Republican members of the Special Select Committee on Judicial Accountability and Transparency.
Full list of signatories:
Rep. Sue Vinton, House Majority Leader, Billings
Rep. Casey Knudsen, House Speaker Pro Tempore, Malta
Rep. Wylie Galt, Speaker of the House, Martinsdale
Sen. Mark Blasdel, President of the Senate, Kalispell
Sen. Jason Ellsworth, Senate President Pro Tempore, Hamilton
Sen. Cary Smith, Senate Majority Leader, Billings
Rep. Sharon Greef, HB 176 sponsor, Florence
Sen. Mike Cuffe, SB 169 sponsor, Eureka
Rep. Paul Fielder, HB 506 sponsor, Thompson Falls
Rep. Wendy McKamey, HB 530 sponsor, Chair of House State Administration, Ulm
Sen. Greg Hertz, Chair of Special Select Committee on Judicial Accountability and Transparency, Polson
Sen. Keith Regier, Chair of Senate Judiciary, Kalispell
Rep. Barry Usher, Chair of House Judiciary, Billings
Sen. Doug Kary, Chair of Senate State Administration, Billings
Sen. Tom McGillvray, Special Select Committee on Judicial Accountability and Transparency, Billings
Rep. Amy Regier, Special Select Committee on Judicial Accountability and Transparency, Kalispell
Sen. Kenneth Bogner, Miles City
Rep. Ed Buttrey, Great Falls
Rep. Caleb Hinkle, Belgrade
Sen. John Esp, Big Timber
Rep. Seth Berglee, Joliet
Sen. Gordon Vance, Belgrade
Rep. John Fuller, Kalispell
Rep. Jeremy Trebas, Great Falls
Sen. Russ Tempel, Chester
Rep. Kerri Seekins-Crowe, Billings
Sen. Carl Glimm, Kila
Rep. Sherry Essmann, Billings
Rep. Marta Bertoglio, Clancy
Rep. Steve Gunderson, Libby
Rep. Scot Kerns, Great Falls
Rep. Mallerie Stromswold, Billings
Rep. Ron Marshall, Hamilton
Sen. Brad Molnar, Laurel
Rep. Derek Skees, Kalispell
Rep. Brad Tschida, Missoula
Sen. David Howard, Park City
Rep. Rhonda Knudsen, Culbertson
Rep. David Bedey, Hamilton
Sen. Bob Brown, Thompson Falls
Rep. Jennifer Carlson, Manhattan
Sen. Steve Hinebauch, Wibaux
Rep. Terry Moore, Billings
Rep. Ken Walsh, Twin Bridges
Rep. Jedediah Hinkle, Belgrade
Rep. Vince Ricci, Laurel
Rep. Matt Regier, Kalispell
Rep. Steve Gist, Cascade
Rep. Becky Beard, Elliston
Rep. Llew Jones, Conrad
Rep. Jane Gillette, Bozeman
Rep. Linda Reksten, Polson
Rep. Bob Phalen, Lindsay
Rep. Jerry Schillinger, Circle
Rep. Steven Galloway, Great Falls
Rep. Fiona Nave, Columbus
Rep. Ross Fitzgerald, Fairfield
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