Since the early 2000s, election law has been taught at most of the law schools throughout the
United States.[5] American election law experts and academics are connected in the academic network founded by
Daniel H. Lowenstein, professor at
UCLA Law School, and
Richard L. Hasen. Lowenstein is considered the "pioneer" and the one who "invented" the election law.[6][7][8] In 2000s, Lowenstein and Hasen edited the
Election Law Journal and the election law mailinglist.[6] As of 2022, Hasen manages the Election Law Blog and the mailing list.[9][10] The Election Law Journal is an academic publication devoted to election law, currently edited by David Canon of the
University of Wisconsin-Madison.[11] Most of its articles deal with election law in the United States.[12]
According to the Routledge Handbook of Election Law, election law is a growing area globally.[13][14][15] Voters around the world are increasingly challenging election results.
Austria,
Switzerland,
Slovenia,
Iceland,
Kenya, and
Malawi are some countries where courts have recently invalidated national elections or referendums.[16] Electoral disputes are good for democracy, according to the book's editors.[13] They can "remove voters' doubts, remedy violations, increase trust, and, when needed, invalidate flawed elections and defend the integrity of the electoral process. Letting all participants know violations will not be tolerated benefits future elections."[16]
Issues
Some of the questions that are addressed by election law are:
Which people are
entitled to vote in an
election (e.g. age, residency or literacy requirements, or
poll taxes), and the procedures by which such persons must
register to vote or present identification in order to vote
Which people are entitled to hold office (for example, age, residency, birth or citizenship requirements), and the procedures
candidates must follow to appear on the ballot (such as the formatting and filing of
nominating petitions) and rules governing
write-in candidates
The rules about what subjects may be submitted to a direct popular vote through a
referendum or plebiscite, and the rules that governmental agencies or citizen groups must follow to place questions on the ballot for public consideration
The framework by which
political parties may organize their internal government, and how they select candidates to run for political office (e.g.
primary elections)
The financing of elections (e.g. contribution limits, rules for
public financing of elections, the public disclosure of contributors, and rules governing
interest groups other than a candidate's campaign organization)
What restrictions are placed on campaign advocacy (such as rules on anonymous adds,
false advertising, and limits on
free speech)
How votes are cast at an election (including whether to use a paper
ballot, or some other form of recording votes such as a mechanical
voting machine or
electronic voting device, and how information is presented to voters on the ballot or device)
How votes are counted at an election, recounts, and election challenges
Whether, and how, voters or candidates may file legal actions in a
court of law or administrative agency to enforce their rights or contest the outcome of an election
The sources of election law (for example, constitutions, national statutes, state statutes, or judicial decisions) and the interplay between these sources of law
Sources of election law
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The French electoral code addresses most of the elections. However, other texts frame this material for special elections. Thus the Constitution but fixed some general basic provisions concerning the presidential election, the legislative and senatorial elections.
For litigation election, the court depends on the concerned election. The Constitutional Council is responsible for the most important elections: presidential elections and senatorial elections or referendums. In contrast, to the municipal or district elections the administrative tribunal has jurisdiction, then the appeal is to the State Council. Finally, for the regional and European elections, the Council of State which has jurisdiction at first and last resort.
In decisions on electoral matters, the law takes into account the results: if an essential principle is violated, the election is canceled but if fraud is "classic" (ballot stuffing, failure to register as voters, vote the dead ...) but the election was won (after counting of ballots invalidated) with a large or very large lead, the judge then cancels rarely the result.[17]
Italy
The Italian Constitution fixes some general basic provisions concerning the legislative elections.
Electoral disputes in Italy are complex because they are divided between several court orders. For example, with regard to the dispute concerning registration of candidates for ballots or litigation election, the administrative court has jurisdiction. For eligibility and disfranchisement, the judge is the ordinary tribunal.[18]
If a fraud is proven by the judge, it does not cancel necessarily the elections,[19] unless they think that the result of election without the fraud would not have been identical. The survival of the acts already performed by the elected organs would seem solved by abundant case law that protects innocent trust of third parties.[20]
Elections in Mexico are held every 6 years to elect a president and every 3 years to elect a legislature. These elections determine who, on the national level, takes the position of the
head of state – the
president – as well as the
legislature. At the local level, each of Mexico's
31 constituent states elects a
governor to serve a six-year term; they also elect legislative deputies who sit in state congresses, and municipal presidents (presidentes municipales, or
mayors).
Mexico City, the national capital, elects a
head of government in lieu of a mayor,
city assemblymen in lieu of state congressional deputies, and
borough mayors in lieu of municipal mayors.
Synchronized with the national elections are the local elections. The voter may vote for any of the following:
Provincial-level: One governor, one vice governor, one to seven
Sangguniang Panlalawigan members (provincial board)
City- or municipal-level: one mayor, one vice mayor, four to twelve
Sangguniang Panlungsod/
Sangguniang Bayan members (city or municipal council, respectively)
Elections in the United States are held for
government officials at the
federal,
state, and
local levels. At the federal level, the nation's
head of state, the
president, is elected indirectly by the people of each
state, through an
Electoral College. Today, these electors almost always vote with the popular vote of their state. All members of the federal legislature, the
Congress, are directly elected by the people of each state. There are many elected offices at state level, each state having at least an elective
governor and
legislature. There are also elected offices at the local level, in
counties, cities, towns, townships, boroughs, and villages; as well as for
special districts and
school districts which may transcend county and municipal boundaries.
The
Electoral Administration Act 2006 made a number of improvements to electoral registration, improving the security arrangements for absent voting, allowing observers to attend elections and a major change in reducing the minimum age for candidates at UK parliamentary elections. It also introduced the performance standards regime for electoral services.
^On the other side, opposite judgement comes when the participation of the lists has resulted in an imbalance, also because the deviation of the votes between the two clusters is less than one thousand ballotts: Buonomo, Giampiero (2001).
"La partecipazione (viziata) delle liste produce uno squilibrio nel voto". Diritto&Giustizia Edizione Online. Archived from
the original on 2012-08-01. Retrieved 2016-03-19.
Election Law Journal – A scholarly journal devoted to election law
Election Law @ Moritz – a repository of Election Law news and commentary from academics and practitioners, compiled at the Ohio State Michael E. Moritz College of Law.
Electoral Studies – A scholarly journal devoted to the study of elections
Samuel Issacharoff,
Pamela S. Karlan &
Richard H. Pildes. The Law of Democracy: Legal Structure of the Political Process. 4th Rev. Ed. Foundation Press, 2012.