A federal judge ordered the North Carolina Board of Elections on May 5 to certify the results of the state’s 2024 Supreme Court election and confirm the victory of Democratic incumbent Justice Allison Riggs after the results were challenged by a Republican judge.
Myers wrote that Griffin cannot “change the rules of the game after it had been played.”
“The court cannot countenance that strategy ... which implicates the very integrity of the election and offends ’the law’s basic interest in finality,'” the judge wrote.
“Permitting parties to ‘upend the set rules’ of an election after the election has taken place can only produce ’confusion and turmoil [which] threatens to undermine public confidence in the federal courts, state agencies, and the elections themselves.'”
Myers’s ruling comes after Griffin sought to have more than 60,000 ballots that had been counted in the final tally on Nov. 5 thrown out, with the Republican arguing that voters did not provide their state driver’s license numbers or Social Security numbers, as is required when registering under a 2004 state law.
Still, the state’s highest court determined that thousands of overseas and military ballots that lacked photo identification as required by state law needed to verify their eligibility within a 30-day period known as a “cure period” or risk having their votes tossed out.
Retroactive Invalidation Violates Voters’ Rights, Judge Finds
Myers said the “case concerns whether the federal Constitution permits a state to alter the rules of an election after the fact and apply those changes retroactively to only a select group of voters, and in so doing treat those voters differently than other similarly situated individuals.”“This case is also about whether a state may redefine its class of eligible voters but offer no process to those who may have been misclassified as ineligible,” he wrote.
The judge concluded that the retroactive invalidation of absentee ballots cast by overseas military and civilian voters violates voters’ equal protection and due process rights under the Constitution.
He directed the state’s elections board to certify the election results without implementing the “cure period” or removing any ballots from the final count.
Myers stayed his decision for seven days to allow Griffin time to appeal with the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Democrats welcomed the decision.
The Epoch Times contacted Griffin’s office for further comment but did not receive a response by publication time.