. . . The lawsuit claims there are rules which the DNC is obliged to follow but did not, along with certain U.S. Constitutional rights the veteran state lawmaker and party super delegate contends are being violated. The litigation takes aim at three essential issues: 1. The DNC broke its own rules by not investigating the events that led to Florida's ealy vote before punishing the state. 2. Even though Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina also broke the same party rules by moving up their primaries, they were not sanctioned as Florida was, but were instead granted a waiver by the DNC from any such penalties. 3. As the controversy unfolded, the DNC maintained that Florida should have held a post-primary Caucus. Doing so, Geller argued, likely would have resulted in only about 100,000 votes being counted, a tiny fraction of the 1.75 million voters who turned out in January, while at the same time, completely disenfranchising Florida Democrats in our country’s military serving outside of Florida.
Points 1 and 2 are non-starters as legal issues imo. The courts have no jurisdiction over those issues. Point 3 is where the Voting Rights Act MIGHT come into play. But my first impression is this is a sideshow. No court is going to do anything in time to matter. I'll try and take a better look later.
By Big Tent Democrat, speaking for me only.