DOJ Undermines Pentagon, Allows Wisconsin To Ignore Military Voting Protections

By Kay Daly
September 10, 2010 6:10 PM

Friday night breaking news never seems to be good news for the Republic or the Constitution. And in this case, it is also bad news for those who put their lives on the line to protect the Constitution.

The Department of Justice has negotiated a secret deal with Wisconsin that will basically subvert the MOVE act, designed to protect the voting rights of military voters. http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/breaking-d ... epage=true

According to PajamasMedia:

Today the Department of Justice effectively rewrote the 2009 MOVE Act designed to protect military voters. In a settlement reached with the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board, the Holder Justice Department allowed Wisconsin to mail ballots to overseas military voters only 32 days before the election, instead of the statutorily mandated 45 days.

The Pentagon had denied Wisconsin's application for a waiver from the 45-day requirement: "The states granted waivers presented thorough and comprehensive plans to protect the voting opportunities for military and overseas voters," Bob Carey, director of the Federal Voting Assistance Program, said in a statement. Wisconsin's waiver application didn't even come close to compliance with the MOVE Act. They wanted to send ballots only 29 days before the election. The folks at the Pentagon rightfully denied the waiver request.

The victory for military voters was short-lived.

Instead of aggressively suing Wisconsin immediately after the waiver denial, the DOJ engaged in secret negotiations. An immediate lawsuit would have strengthened the negotiating position of the DOJ as well as preserved various equitable legal arguments, including the argument DOJ waited too long to commence litigation. Instead of doing the right thing, the DOJ did the easy thing and reached a settlement with Wisconsin that undermined the Pentagon's denial of Wisconsin's waiver request.

The tough negotiating stance of the Holder DOJ extracted a whopping additional three days out of Wisconsin. Ballots will mail 32 days before the election instead of 29. A consent decree filed Friday will reflect this quisling agreement. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consent_decree

That time was added to allow ballots to roll in after the election, but time after the election is different in quality than time before. The MOVE Act was explicitly designed to add time before an election to ensure the solider would get a ballot in time to benefit from the express delivery requirement under the MOVE Act. This guarantees that ballots placed in military mail at least 7 days before an election will be returned in time to be counted. By sending ballots only 32 days before the election, many overseas soldiers will be denied this important guarantee. Congress specifically rejected post-election add-on time as a solution. Compressing the pre-election time ignores both of these important statutory purposes.

Outrageous, pure and simple.

http://www.gopusa.com/fresh-ink/2010/09 ... ctions.php