Abstract
Scholarship on election-administration measures (like voter ID laws) and campaign-finance laws has been siloed. American political affiliations, in their current form, dictate that liberals support campaign-finance restrictions and oppose voter ID laws, and vice versa for conservatives. But the Court has analyzed both measures using the similarly odd lens of appearances—the perception of electoral integrity in voter ID cases and the perception of corruption in campaign-finance cases. Yet despite the nearly identical justifications for campaign-finance and election-administration measures, the Court has treated these claims quite differently. Election-administration laws receive nearly automatic deference, whereas campaign-finance laws are routinely overturned. This Article contends that there is no neutral reason for this disparate treatment and shows how lower courts are more willing to overturn election-administration laws rooted in appearance justifications. The Article concludes by proposing several ways for the Court to reform its jurisprudence of appearances, like affirming lower-court opinions that more intensely scrutinize election-administration laws, forcing states to more narrowly define their appearance justifications, and/or shifting the focus to a motives-based inquiry in keeping with the Court’s racial-gerrymandering jurisprudence.
Recommended Citation
Kishore S. Chundi,
Voter Confidence and the World of Appearances: Where Campaign-Finance and Election-Administration Law Collide,
3
Fordham L. Voting Rts. & Democracy F.
(2025).
Available at:
https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/vrdf/vol3/iss3/2