Montana
Data analyst said 59 people in Montana tried to vote in 2021, but were denied
(Day by day Montanan) A database analyst employed by Montana’s largest union testified on Wednesday that in the course of the municipal elections held in 2021, she recognized 59 voters who tried to register to vote between midday the day earlier than the election and on Election Day, however apparently couldn’t vote due to a legislation handed by the 2021 Legislature.
That legislation, Home Invoice 176, which eradicated Election Day Registration, and two different legal guidelines are on trial as a bunch of plaintiffs, together with Western Native Voice, the Blackfeet Nation and the American Civil Liberties Union, declare the payments violate the Montana Structure and disproportionately goal Native People dwelling on reservations all through the state.
Kendra Miller of Bozeman testified that as a database analyst for the Montana Federation of Public Workers, she was known as upon to investigate the consequences of Home Invoice 176 since its implementation. The 2021 Legislature pushed again voting registration to the day earlier than elections, successfully shortening the “late registration” interval by 36 hours. Miller can also be a well-known identify as she is a part of the five-person state redistricting fee as one of many Democrat-appointed representatives on the panel.
Utilizing publicly accessible databases from the Secretary of State’s web site and utilizing the MFPE’s knowledge request to clerks in all 56 Montana counties, Miller decided that 268 residents tried to register in the course of the 36-hour time interval that was modified by HB 176.
“There have been greater than that that I don’t have identification for as a result of clerks on the workplace mentioned folks got here in to get the paperwork, or requested for data or went away with out finishing the paperwork,” Miller mentioned.
Of that quantity, roughly 80 % of these folks got here in on Election Day, Miller informed the court docket. From there she additional drilled down on the info and it revealed that not all of those that have been registering throughout that quick window had a municipal election they have been eligible to vote in.
After compiling and analyzing the info, Miller decided no less than 59 folks from 10 totally different counties tried to register and will have voted in November 2021, however have been denied a poll. Miller mentioned the quantity could also be greater as a result of three counties didn’t reply to the request.
Miller additionally found that two counties, together with Ravalli County, had residents register previous the midday deadline, however have been processed anyway.
“One county was doing one factor and never the opposite,” Miller mentioned.
Greater than 200,000 votes have been solid throughout 2021, usually thought-about an “off election” 12 months as a result of solely municipalities or college board elections usually occurred.
Miller analyzed the 59 voters and decided that 35 of the voters have been new to Montana, 16 have been voters shifting from different Montana counties, and the remaining eight have been registered in the identical county, however wanted to change precincts.
Nonetheless, legal professional Lars Phillips, who’s a part of Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen’s authorized group, requested Miller if these 59 voters might have been denied a poll for different causes.
“You offered a concept about these 59 voters not having the ability to vote,” Phillips mentioned.
“It’s not a concept,” Miller responded, “it’s a conclusion.”
“Somebody would possibly get the info and do the analysis and never give you the identical conclusion. Do you agree that’s potential,” Phillips requested.
“I may very well be mistaken if there’s new data that the county has that I didn’t find out about, however utilizing the knowledge from the general public knowledge request, and primarily based on this data, it’s no less than 59 voters who might have voted,” she replied.
Phillips requested if was potential that these 59 folks might have been ineligible for different causes, together with residency necessities.
One other voter denied
Earlier than Miller took the stand, Bozeman resident Sarah Anne Denson testified that she’d been turned away on the Gallatin County Election Workplace on Election Day 2021 when she tried to change her registration and vote within the municipal elections. She was one of many 59 folks included in Miller’s analysis as was Thomas Bogle, additionally of Gallatin County, who testified within the trial in Yellowstone County District Courtroom on Tuesday.
Denson described being a Montana State College scholar who moved a number of occasions, and was initially from Miles Metropolis. When the 2021 poll didn’t catch as much as her, she went with a buddy to the election workplace in Bozeman on Election Day 2021 solely to be denied a poll as a result of the registration interval had closed, in step with HB 176.
“I used to be notably excited as a result of one among my buddies who I grew up with was working for metropolis commissioner and he had campaigned on inexpensive housing and being extra housing pleasant,” Denson mentioned. “He was additionally the primary individual I’ve seen that’s my age working for public workplace.”
Attorneys for Jacobsen identified that she might have voted in Custer County (Miles Metropolis), however she mentioned that she had work and couldn’t take the time to drive the six hours every method.
The clerk on the Gallatin County workplace confirmed she couldn’t vote due to the brand new legislation, Denson mentioned, and wasn’t given the chance to vote a provisional poll.
“I felt fairly dissatisfied and bummed out, and in the long run, when my buddy didn’t win the election, I felt that I ought to have supported him and I had watched my roommate register and vote the 12 months earlier than,” Denson mentioned.
Confusion and voter fraud
Kiersten Iwai, the manager director of the Ahead Montana Basis, which has as a part of its mission to register younger voters and get them concerned within the democratic course of, informed the courtroom that these new legal guidelines have created confusion for younger voters, and that many are confused concerning the acceptable identification.
“These layers inhibit an individual’s means to vote,” Iwai mentioned.
Attorneys for Jacobsen pushed again, mentioning the ways in which a voter can register with out having image identification, for instance having the final 4 digits of a Social Safety quantity.
Additionally they requested her questions on whether or not the muse helps safe elections and measures to guard the system from voter fraud.
“I don’t get how these new legal guidelines would forestall fraud that doesn’t exist,” Iwai mentioned.
Northern Cheyenne Tribal Councilmember Lane Noticed Elk informed the court docket that the tribal authorities believes extra Native People use poll collectors or Election Day registration than their non-Native counterparts. He mentioned the brand new guidelines, together with HB530, which bans collectors from receiving any “pecuniary advantages,” make leaders hesitant to take motion for concern of violating the brand new legislation.
“We consider we’d do (get out the vote actions), however we’re undecided of the state’s interpretation,” Noticed Elk mentioned. “The Northern Cheyenne consider in advocating for entry to voting and really feel very strongly about any effort to suppress the Native vote is just not conducive to the Cheyenne lifestyle. Possibly that wasn’t the intent of the Legislature, however that’s what they did. They suppressed it.”
Montana
Montana Supreme Court upholds landmark youth climate ruling
Montana’s Supreme Court has upheld a lower court’s decision that had sided with 16 young activists who argued that the state violated their right to a clean environment.
The lawsuit was brought by students arguing that a state law banning the consideration of climate when choosing energy policy was unconstitutional.
In a 6-to-1 ruling, the top court found that the plaintiffs, between ages five and 22, had a “fundamental constitutional right to a clean and healthful environment”.
Wednesday’s ruling came after a district court’s decision last year was appealed by the state. Similar climate lawsuits are ongoing across the US but this is first of its kind a from a state supreme court.
The lawsuit targeted a 2011 state law that made it illegal for environmental reviews to consider climate impacts when deciding on new projects, like building new power plants.
It cited a 50-year-old constitutional clause that guaranteed the “state and each person shall maintain and improve a clean and healthful environment in Montana for present and future generations”.
The ruling on Wednesday stated that the “plaintiffs showed at trial – without dispute – that climate change is harming Montana’s environmental life support system now and with increasing severity for the foreseeable future” .
Rikki Held, the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit, said in a statement that “this ruling is a victory not just for us, but for every young person whose future is threatened by climate change”.
Montana state officials expressed disappointment with the court’s decision.
Governor Greg Gianforte said his office was still assessing the ruling, but predicted the impact would be “perpetual lawsuits that will waste taxpayer dollars and drive up energy bills for hardworking Montanans”.
Western Environmental Law Center, which represented the young plaintiffs, said in a statement that the decision marks “a turning point in Montana’s energy policy”.
It said plaintiffs and their legal team “are committed to ensuring the full implementation of the ruling”.
Similar cases are scheduled to be heard in several other states, including Hawaii, Utah and Alaska, as well as in countries like Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Colombia and Uganda.
Montana
Montana Supreme Court affirms decision in landmark youth climate case
What’s New
The Montana Supreme Court on Wednesday affirmed a landmark climate decision that declared the state was violating residents’ constitutional right to a clean environment by allowing oil, gas and coal projects without regard for global warming.
Why It Matters
The decision reinforces an August 2023 ruling by District Court Judge Kathy Seeley, who found that Montana’s practices violated its residents’ constitutional right to a “clean and healthful environment.”
This pivotal case, spearheaded by a group of young plaintiffs aged 6 to 23, represented a milestone for climate advocates seeking judicial intervention to compel governmental action on climate change.
What To Know
On Wednesday in a 6-1 ruling, the Montana Supreme Court upheld the August 2023 decision.
The court’s decision strikes down a state policy that prohibited the consideration of greenhouse gas emissions in granting permits for fossil fuel development.
The state had previously appealed the ruling by Seeley, and arguments were heard in July, in which the state argued that greenhouse gases released from Montana fossil fuel projects are minuscule on a global scale and reducing them would have no effect on climate change.
Chief Justice Mike McGrath dismissed the state’s argument that Montana’s emissions are insignificant on a global scale, likening the defense to an “everyone else is doing it” excuse.
McGrath wrote, “The right to a clean and healthful environment is meaningless if the State abdicates its responsibility to protect it.”
What Are People Saying
Melissa Hornbein, an attorney with the Western Environmental Law Center and attorney for the plaintiffs said, “With the ruling now in place, the Montana Supreme Court’s decision compels the state to carefully assess the greenhouse gas emissions and climate impacts of all future fossil fuel permits.”
Chief Justice Mike McGrath wrote for the majority: “Plaintiffs may enforce their constitutional right to a clean and healthful environment against the State, which owes them that affirmative duty, without requiring everyone else to stop jumping off bridges or adding fuel to the fire. Otherwise the right to a clean and healthful environment is meaningless.”
Republican Governor Greg Gianforte said in a statement that the state was still reviewing the decision, but said it will lead to “perpetual lawsuits that will waste taxpayer dollars and drive up energy bills for hardworking Montanans.
Pushback From State Leadership
The ruling has sparked a backlash from Gianforte, who criticized the court for what he described as judicial overreach. He warned the decision could invite an onslaught of lawsuits, increase energy costs for Montanans and hinder the state’s “all-of-the-above” energy strategy.
“This Court continues to step outside of its lane to tread on the right of the Legislature, the elected representatives of the people, to make policy,” he said in a statement. “This decision does nothing more than declare open season on Montana’s all-of-the-above approach to energy, which is key to providing affordable and reliable energy to homes, schools, and businesses across our state.”
Gianforte also convened energy stakeholders earlier this week to discuss boosting production to meet rising demand, emphasizing the need for “unleashing American energy” to maintain grid stability.
The Plaintiffs’ Perspective
For the 16 young plaintiffs, the court’s decision validates their personal struggles with the tangible effects of climate change. In a Wednesday statement, lead plaintiff Rikki Held called the ruling “a victory not just for us, but for every young person whose future is threatened by climate change.”
During the trial, the plaintiffs described how worsening wildfires, droughts and diminishing snowpack have disrupted their lives, polluted the air and depleted vital natural resources. They argued that the state’s failure to address these challenges imperils their future and violates their constitutional rights.
What Happens Next
The ruling has positioned Montana as a flashpoint in the national debate over climate accountability, potentially inspiring similar legal challenges across the United States.
This article includes reporting from The Associated Press.
Montana
Pregnant woman claims Montana Highway Patrol wrongfully arrested her for DUI
BOZEMAN — A pregnant woman from Sheridan is claiming she was wrongfully arrested by the Montana Highway Patrol (MHP) for allegedly driving under the influence during a traffic stop near Bozeman.
“I was just pretty shocked. And I constantly told him I’m pregnant, and I haven’t drunk in probably eight months,” says Alyssa Johnson.
Alyssa is a photographer from Sheridan who, at 22 weeks pregnant, was pulled over by an MHP trooper on Dec. 1, 2024 for an alleged traffic violation.
“I have a stutter, and he thought I was slurring so he pretty much said can you step out of the car. Made me do all these kinds of tests,” says Alyssa.
Alyssa explains that she has severe dyslexia, which makes understanding directions, and completing any sort of test, difficult.
“I mean, Alyssa, when she was in school, she used to have extra time to take an exam and she’d have questions read to her,” explains Alyssa’s husband, Tim Johnson.
Alyssa says in addition to her mental handicap, she was in a state of panic during the traffic stop—affecting her ability to give a proper breathalyzer result.
“They were saying that since I couldn’t breathe through the breathalyzer and the testing wasn’t doing good, they arrested me and pretty much took me to the hospital for more blood work,” she says.
A written statement by her therapist confirms Alyssa’s dyslexia diagnosis.
And after the incident, the couple got a third-party blood test—because the one conducted by law enforcement could take up to eight weeks to return.
The blood test, provided by the Johnsons, shows negative for any type of drug.
Alyssa says, “I take a prenatal, an aspirin for my blood pressure, and stuff for my heartburn, like Tums. Just like simple stuff.”
Tim explains that in addition to expecting their second child, they’re currently building a home—making the cost of bail and towing a hard hit on finances.
He says, “We have a budget to stick to and the budget doesn’t include any unexpected costs like this.”
Tim says this is an opportunity for police to receive better training on mental impairments and hopes that charges will be dropped from Alyssa’s record.
“And I understand they have to do their job too. I mean, support police. But this wasn’t right to do,” she says.
The couple says they have filed a formal complaint with MHP.
I reached out to MHP for comment but did not receive a response regarding the incident. We will update this story if we hear back.
-
Business1 week ago
OpenAI's controversial Sora is finally launching today. Will it truly disrupt Hollywood?
-
Politics6 days ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology7 days ago
Inside the launch — and future — of ChatGPT
-
Technology5 days ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics5 days ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology5 days ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
-
Politics7 days ago
Conservative group debuts major ad buy in key senators' states as 'soft appeal' for Hegseth, Gabbard, Patel
-
Business3 days ago
Freddie Freeman's World Series walk-off grand slam baseball sells at auction for $1.56 million