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Maricopa County says Phoenix Union ballots wrong, seeks court guidance

Maricopa County is seeking direction from a federal court after it was found to have mistakenly violated a consent decree when preparing ballots involving the Phoenix Union High School District Governing Board election.

The county and the Board of Supervisors filed a motion for an emergency hearing in the U.S. District Court for Arizona on Tuesday, writing in their filing that they were found to have “inadvertently violated” the ballot consent decree. .

The consent decree comes after a group of black and Hispanic voters in the school district argued that the mass race violated their rights under the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Civil Rights Act of 1871. , enacted in 1990. The statute states that in the 1980s, the majority white population within the district boundaries voted “sufficiently as a bloc to normally defeat minority candidates” on the board. “Thus, despite a sizable minority voting population…the overall electoral barrier combined with a racially polarized vote meant that a majority of British voters chose candidates from minority voters.” Now you can defeat.”

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