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Montana Supreme Court won't intervene in ballot petitions case

The Attorney General’s office asked the court to take over the case after a district court judge ordered the Montana Secretary of State to count inactive voters as qualified electors.

Duration:
0m
Broadcast on:
31 Jul 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

The Montana Supreme Court will not intervene in a case over which signatures count towards citizen ballot petitions. The Attorney General's office asked the court to take over the case after a district court judge ordered the Montana Secretary of State to count inactive voters as qualified electors. Inactive voters are registered voters who have not participated in the last two federal elections. The state says the district court's conclusion is incorrect and overstepped its authority by extending a deadline to count signatures. The state argued it needed an urgent remedy, the state's high court disagreed. In a unanimous ruling, the High Court wrote that Secretary of State Chrissy Jacobson's actions led to the time-sensitive lawsuit when she changed her office's guidance. That guidance came two weeks into the county process and told county officials to reject inactive voter signatures. The court also noted that the state's attorney helped craft the order the district court judge signed. Both parties will have another opportunity to make arguments in court on Friday.