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EMERGENCY DOCKET

Court allows Virginia to remove suspected non-citizens from voter rolls

The justices on Wednesday morning granted Virginia’s request to reinstate a program it had used since August to purge more than 1,600 people from its voter rolls. The program, put in place by Gov. Glenn Youngkin, a Republican, uses a DMV database to expedite the removal of suspected noncitizens in the 90 days before the election. But a federal judge found that at least some of those people were U.S. citizens eligible to vote.

The Supreme Court building

Virginia will be able to resume its program to remove suspected noncitizens from the rolls ahead of Tuesday’s election. (Katie Barlow)

SCOTUS NEWS

Justices schedule major First Amendment case for January

The court on Thursday scheduled nine oral arguments for the session that will run Jan. 13 – Jan. 22. The justices will consider a First Amendment dispute over a Texas law that requires websites to verify the age of their users if at least a third of their content is “harmful to minors,” targeting online porn sites. The session will also include cases on the Americans with Disabilities Act, false statements influencing financial institutions, and claims of excessive force by police under the Fourth Amendment.

RELIST WATCH

Timing rules for reviewing deportation decisions concerning persecution or torture risk

 at 7:57 p.m.

A regular round-up of “relisted” petitions. This week: Under federal law, noncitizens can resist  deportation to a particular country by demonstrating that they will be persecuted or tortured if deported there. An asylum officer’s decision to withhold deportation is then reviewed in court. Three newly relisted cases this week address the timing for judicial review of those decisions.

EMERGENCY DOCKET

Republicans ask justices to block decision to count Pennsylvania provisional ballots

The Republican National Committee and the Republican Party of Pennsylvania asked the Supreme Court on Monday to block a ruling by the state’s highest court that requires election officials to count provisional ballots in next week’s election that are submitted by voters whose mail-in ballots have been deemed invalid by a ballot-sorting machine.

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