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Judge Rules Arizona’s Elections Procedures Manual To Be Unconstitutional

August 8, 2024

By Staff Reporter |

The Maricopa County Superior Court ruled against provisions of Arizona’s 2023 Elections Procedures Manual (EPM) on Tuesday.

The EPM, drafted and passed under Democratic Secretary of State Adrian Fontes, was challenged in court earlier this year by the public policy nonprofit, Arizona Free Enterprise Club (AFEC). 

Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Jennifer Ryan-Touhill ruled that Fontes’ 2023 EPM contained speech restrictions that violated the Arizona Constitution, as well as misstatements and modifications of statutes, and failures to identify distinctions between guidance and legal mandates. 

Ryan-Touhill ruled that the EPM’s provisions on speech were unnecessary, vague, overbroad, and serving as universal prohibition on conduct.

“The EPM’s language has restricted what the Secretary finds acceptable regarding behavior, both speech and acts. Our state constitution guarantees a right to speak freely and is only restricted for an abuse of that right,” wrote Ryan-Touhill. “[M]any of the prohibitions listed in the EPM are free speech and protected by both the Arizona Constitution and the U.S. Constitution. What, for example, constitutes a person communicating about voter fraud in a harassing manner? Or, for that matter, ‘posting’ a sign in an intimidating manner?  How does a person either do this behavior — whatever it means — or avoid it?  And what content printed on a t-shirt might be offensive or harassing to one and not another? What if the t-shirt says, ‘I have a bomb and I intend to vote!’? Where does the Secretary draw the line?”

Ryan-Touhill highlighted 13 instances of “problematic language” within Fontes’ 2023 EPM in her ruling:

  • [N]o electioneering may take place outside the 75-foot limit if it is audible from a location inside the door to the voting location.
  • Any activity by a person with the intent or effect of [ ] harassing, [ ] (or conspiring with others to do so) inside or outside the 75-foot limit at a voting location is prohibited.
  • The officer in charge of elections has a responsibility to train poll workers and establish policies to prevent and promptly remedy any instances of voter intimidation.
  • The officer in charge of elections should publicize and/or implement the following guidelines as applicable:
    • The inspector must utilize the marshal to preserve order and remove disruptive persons from the voting location.
    • Openly carrying a firearm outside the 75-foot limit may also constitute unlawful voter intimidation, depending on the context.
  • Aggressive behavior, such as raising one’s voice or taunting a voter or poll worker.
  • Using [ ] insulting [ ] or offensive language to a voter or poll worker.  Disrupting voting lines.
  • Following voters or poll workers coming to or leaving a voting location, including to or from their vehicles.
  • Intentionally disseminating false or misleading information at a voting location. . . .   
  • Directly confronting, questioning, photographing, or videotaping voters or poll workers in a harassing [ ] manner, including when the voter or poll worker is coming to or leaving the polling location. 
  • Asking voters for “documentation” or other questions that only poll workers should perform.
  • Raising repeated frivolous voter challenges to poll workers without any good faith basis, or raising voter challenges based on race, ethnicity, national origin, language, religion or disability.
  • Posting signs or communicating messages about penalties for “voter fraud” in a harassing or intimidating manner. 

Judge Ryan-Touhill assessed that the EPM’s provisions modified the criminal intent and effect of crimes outlined by Arizona laws against harassment and voter intimidation or threats. 

“The Secretary has no authority to change a mens rea, regardless of the objective of the language,” said Ryan-Touhill. “Moreover, neither law allows for a subjective belief of the alleged target of the crime but rather focuses upon the acts of the criminal (e.g., force, violence, infliction) or the victim (‘a reasonable person’).”

AFEC President Scot Mussi said in a press release that he was happy to see the court protect Arizonans’ First Amendment rights within elections.

“The judge correctly realized that certain portions of Secretary Fontes’ illegal and radical manual were nothing more than a brazen attempt to destroy the integrity and transparency of state elections,” said Mussi. “Secretary Fontes and his team of leftwing ideologues must conform the entire manual to state law as is their statutory duty.”

The court ordered the sections of the EPM containing speech restrictions to be unenforceable.

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