Minnesota Voters Alliance sues Minneapolis over elections grant

Group says such funding is illegal; city plans to increase ballot access amid pandemic.

September 26, 2020 at 4:12AM
The Minneapolis Early Vote Center. ] GLEN STUBBE • glen.stubbe@startribune.com Wednesday, July 29, 2020 Absentee ballots are being requested at a record level this year. Nearly 470,000 Minnesotans have requested to vote absentee. That's an amazing 12-times the number requesting mail in voting at this point in 2018. This year's demand obliterates the demand in the 2016 Presidential election, when only 20,000 absentee ballots were requested by July 24. ORG XMIT: MIN2007291714401139
The Minneapolis Early Vote Center. An attorney for the Minnesota Voters Alliance — and four Minneapolis residents — argues in a lawsuit that the city does not have the authority to accept money from private organizations to help cover election costs. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

The Minnesota Voters Alliance is suing the city of Minneapolis, seeking to block it from accepting money to help cover the costs of the presidential election.

The city announced last week that it is in the running for a grant, estimated between $2 million and $3 million, from the nonprofit Center for Tech and Civic Life (CTCL), based in Chicago.

The city intends to use the grant money to help plug a gap in its elections budget. City officials initially budgeted $6.4 million for elections this year, and spent $3.7 million of that running the presidential nomination primary, the Sixth Ward special election and the state primary.

Spokesman Casper Hill said the city originally estimated it would cost $4.1 million to run the presidential general election, leaving a gap of roughly $1.4 million. The city could use the grant money to cover that gap and place any leftover funds in next year's elections budget, Hill said.

The city has hired additional election workers and increased safety precautions as it prepares for high voter turnout during the corona­virus pandemic.

In a suit filed in the U.S. District Court of Minnesota Thursday, an attorney for the Minnesota Voters Alliance — and four Minneapolis residents — argues that the city does not have the authority to accept money from private organizations to help cover election costs. The suit argues that the U.S. Constitution's Elections Clause, the National Voter Registration Act, the Help America Vote Act and Minnesota laws would prohibit cities from accepting these types of grants.

"The idea of the federal and state government exclusively funding federal elections is to eliminate undue influence and the appearance of undue influence by private parties," wrote attorney Erick G. Kaardal. "With the entanglement of public and private interests, CTCL's private funding of federal elections introduces undue influence and the appearance of undue influence into federal elections — which should be declared ... constitutionally impermissible."

Kaardal wrote that other cities that have received grants from the center "have progressive voting patterns." The alliance is also working on a separate lawsuit, supported by Republican legislators, that seeks to block a face mask requirement at polling places.

Minneapolis City Attorney Jim Rowader said the city will defend itself against the lawsuit.

"Grant funds are being used by the City to increase ballot access to any voter who wants to safely cast a ballot during the COVID-19 pandemic," Rowader said in a statement. "Our goal is to empower all voters regardless of their party affiliation."

CTCL also released a statement late Friday calling the lawsuit "baseless" and "frivolous."

"This year, we've heard from countless election officials, from across the political spectrum, who simply don't have the funding they need to provide a safe, secure voting process for their voters as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic," the organization said. "In this moment of need, we feel so fortunate to be administering an open call grant program available to every local election department in every state in the union to ensure that they have the staffing, training, and equipment necessary so that this November every eligible voter can participate in a safe and timely way and have their vote counted."

Attorney Erick Kaardal
Attorney Erick Kaardal (Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

about the writer

Liz Navratil

Higher education reporter

Liz Navratil covers higher education for the Star Tribune. She spent the previous three years covering Minneapolis City Hall as leaders responded to the coronavirus pandemic and George Floyd’s murder.

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