Hawaii
Complete coverage for Hawaii can be found below. (Return to States List)
Information & Analysis
There are no news developments in Hawaii that Election Law @ Moritz has covered, or is covering at this time.
Commentary
There are no commentary articles in Hawaii that Election Law @ Moritz has written at this time.
News Wire
Election law news from across the country concerning Hawaii
April, 2013
August, 2010
May, 2010
November, 2009
- Earlier primary voting considered (11/08/09)
September, 2009
- Judge rules on electronic voting ban (9/24/09)
- Maui judge formalizes ruling that bans electronic voting (9/15/09)
July, 2009
- Voting by mail gets another look (7/26/09)
May, 2009
April, 2009
February, 2009
- Honolulu may look into Net voting (2/11/09)
September, 2008
- Some staffing problems meant a late start at some precincts (9/20/08)
- Voters reminded to check ballot carefully (9/19/08)
- Kobayashi accused of election law breach (9/18/08)
- 40% expected to cast early ballot in Hawaii's primary election (9/09/08)
- $500,000 Worth Of Electronic Voting Machines Sit Idle (9/02/08)
August, 2008
- Electronic voting machines get tested (8/24/08)
- Hawaii Redesigns Primary Voting System (8/21/08)
- Voting machine vendor protests contract ruling (8/19/08)
- Voting machine vendor protests contract ruling (8/19/08)
- Parties fear confusion with revised primary ballots (8/19/08)
- Elections chief: Ballots are accurate (8/05/08)
July, 2008
- Editorial: Fairness and rule of law got lost in last-minute flurry of election filing (7/27/08)
- Editorial: Absentee voting has downside (7/23/08)
Litigation
Active Cases
There are no active cases in Hawaii that Election Law @ Moritz is covering at this time.
Archived Cases
There are no archived cases in Hawaii that Election Law @ Moritz has covered at this time.


Commentary
Arizona: Voter Registration and the Road Ahead
Justin Levitt
June arrived with two election law cases at the Supreme Court. One is still pending: a highly anticipated decision on section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. The other, more frequently overlooked, was decided yesterday. And there are some quirks of the opinion that seem to depart from the swiftly congealing conventional wisdom that the states might actually have "won," and now need only run out the clock.
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