Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2023
Publication Information
71 UCLA Law Review Discourse 2 (2023)
Abstract
In 2020 and 2022, multiple Republican county canvassers refused to perform their ministerial duty to approve election returns, obstructing the official certification of the results. The canvassers latched onto false claims of fraud and other conspiracies advanced by election deniers. They eventually relented because of court orders and public pressure. The elections produced official winners, and crisis was averted. But, as long as election denialism rots our political discourse, election obstruction by canvassers will be a persistent risk with significant dangers for our democracy. This Essay provides a brief history of election obstruction by canvassers, examines the modern link between election denialism and election obstruction, and proposes two solutions to minimize the risk of election obstruction—diversifying canvassing institutions and bypassing county canvassers for national and statewide races
Repository Citation
Marisam, Jason, "Election Obstruction" (2023). Faculty Scholarship. 573.
https://open.mitchellhamline.edu/facsch/573