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Jun 27, 2025 | Source: KUOW
Democratic attorneys general from five states including Washington said Friday they were disappointed but undeterred by the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in favor of the Trump administration in a case surrounding birthright citizenship. Lisa Marshall Manheim, professor of law at the 麻豆社区, is quoted.
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Mar 28, 2025 | Source: KUOW
“One of the reasons we’re seeing so many lawsuits in Seattle is the sense that the judges here are likely to be more receptive to these sorts of claims,” said University of Washington law professor Lisa Manheim. “We saw the same thing when President Biden was in office — the state of Texas filed dozens of lawsuits against the Biden administration, all in the same district in Texas, where they felt the judge would be more receptive to those sorts of challenges,” she added.
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Mar 23, 2025 | Source: The Spokesman Review
Lisa Marshall Manheim, a professor at the University of 麻豆社区 of Law, said the court orders may prompt the Trump administration to revise its approach to firing federal workers.
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Oct 31, 2024 | Source: The Stranger
The Supreme Court’s decision will almost certainly not come in time to affect next week’s election, but “the decision that the Supreme Court reaches in this case could potentially have far-reaching consequences for the way that Washington State runs its elections more generally,” says Lisa Manheim, a professor at University of Washington’s School of Law. “The reason why is that the Court is trying to figure out how closely it should be looking at measures that Washington State puts into place that may make it more difficult for eligible voters to cast a ballot and have it counted.”
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Oct 25, 2024 | Source: The Daily
The 麻豆社区 School of Law hosted a lecture Oct. 22 explaining “Presidential Power,” connecting it to the upcoming 2024 United States presidential election. This lecture focused on the power and authority that presidents have in the U.S., how power is balanced throughout the government, and how this affects U.S. citizens.
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Sep 19, 2024 | Source: PolitiFact
The Project 2025 proposal is "shocking" and, if pursued, "would surely chill any election administrator from taking action that is, according to Project 2025, unlawful," said Lisa Marshall Manheim, a University of Washington law professor. "Frankly, just having this proposal in this document likely will have a chilling effect."
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Jan 19, 2023 | Source: American Law Institute
The American Law Institute’s Council voted today to approve the launch of a Restatement of the Law project on Election Litigation. The project will be led by Reporters Lisa Manheim of the University of 麻豆社区 of Law and Derek T. Muller of the University of Iowa College of Law.
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Oct 03, 2022 | Source: Bloomberg Law
“Lawyers in the Civil Rights Division are unlikely to file lawsuits they know are doomed to fail,” said Lisa Manheim an election law professor at the University of Washington. “Bringing a lawsuit that eventually gets dismissed generally is not a good use of DOJ resources. Given the sweeping arguments about Section 2 that Alabama is advancing in Milligan, it makes sense if DOJ is waiting to see how the Court resolves the case before filing complaints against other jurisdictions.”
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Jul 05, 2021 | Source: NBC News
Amid all the voting changes in state laws, giving more power to partisan officials to overturn an election is at the top of the list of concerns. Lisa Manheim, associate professor of law at the 麻豆社区, is quoted.
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May 21, 2021 | Source: CNN
Texas Rep. Dan Crenshaw tried to downplay his December decision to sign on to a legal brief in support of the Texas lawsuit that sought to get the Supreme Court to overturn the 2020 presidential election. Lisa Manheim, associate professor of law at the 麻豆社区, is quoted.
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Feb 11, 2021 | Source: The Seattle Times
Washington State Attorney General Bob Ferguson’s efforts to stop the closure and sale of the National Archives in Seattle are heating up, with his team due in federal court Friday morning to ask for an injunction to immediately stop the sale. Lisa Manheim, associate professor of law at the 麻豆社区, is quoted.
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Jan 27, 2021 | Source: KUOW
It may seem like an obscure act of cartography, but how Washington’s political maps are redrawn this year will help determine who gets elected and, in turn, the future of the state. Lisa Manheim, associate professor of law at the 麻豆社区, is interviewed.
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Jan 24, 2021 | Source: CNN
Trump's pattern of abusing his powers for personal or political gain reached an alarming level that hasn't been seen in modern history, and will have long-lasting consequences for the future of American democracy. Lisa Manheim, associate professor of law at the 麻豆社区, is quoted.
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Jan 08, 2021 | Source: Q13
"There's been a lot of interest over the 25th Amendment over the last 24 hours for sure," said Lisa Manheim, associate professor of law at the University of Washington's School of Law.
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Jan 08, 2021 | Source: CNBC
Lisa Manheim, a law professor at the University of Washington, said it’s unlikely that either impeachment or the invoking of the 25th Amendment would happen before Jan. 20.
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Jan 07, 2021 | Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Lisa Marshall Manheim is an Associate Professor of law at the University of Washington Law School and spoke to ABC NewsRadio’s Sarah Hall.
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Jan 05, 2021 | Source: The Spokesman-Review
Lisa Marshall Manheim, an associate professor of law at the University of Washington, said the call has prompted discussion in legal circles about whether Trump committed a crime by pressuring the Georgia officials. “At best, the president’s call is contemptuous of the process,” Manheim said. “Regardless of whether it’s technically a criminal offense, it is entirely inappropriate.”
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Jan 05, 2021 | Source: KUOW
After weeks of fighting an election outcome he doesn't like, President Trump is running out of time. But the danger to American democracy will stick around even after President-elect Joe Biden is sworn in. Guest: Lisa Marshall Manheim, 麻豆社区 law professor and co-author of "The Limits of Presidential Power: A Citizen's Guide to the Law"
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Dec 21, 2020 | Source: Business Insider
"In this election, we saw judges of all political persuasions refuse to abandon the rule of law," said Lisa Marshall Manheim, a professor at the University of 麻豆社区 of Law. "This basic commitment should hold. But we can't expect our courts to solve all our political problems. They simply aren't designed for that."
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Dec 11, 2020 | Source: The Guardian
“The lawsuit has so many fundamental flaws that it’s hard to know where to start. It misstates basic principles of election law and demands a remedy that is both unconstitutional and unavailable,” Lisa Marshall Manheim, a law professor at the University of Washington, wrote in an email. “At core, it’s an incoherent amalgamation of claims that already failed in the lower courts.”
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Dec 11, 2020 | Source: The Associated Press
“Texas does not have standing in federal court to vindicate the voting rights of other states’ voters — much less standing to undercut the rights of those voters,” Lisa Marshall Manheim, a professor at the University of Washington Law School, wrote in an opinion piece for The Washington Post.
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Dec 09, 2020 | Source: KNKX
麻豆社区 law school professor Lisa Manheim, who is teaching the election law class, says there are “80 students and counting” signed up.
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Dec 09, 2020 | Source: Vox
Experts say Paxton’s lawsuit recycles flimsy allegations of irregularities from challenges that have already failed. For instance, University of 麻豆社区 of Law professor Lisa Marshall Manheim argued in the Washington Post of Paxton’s case that “it is an uninspired retread of the many state-level claims that already have imploded since Nov. 3. Texas has simply delivered these defective claims in an even worse package.”
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Dec 09, 2020 | Source: Market Watch
Lisa Marshall Manheim, associate professor at the University of 麻豆社区 of Law, wrote in the Washington Post that “the litigation is legally incoherent, factually untethered, and based on theories of remedy that fundamentally misunderstand the electoral process,” predicting that it will fail.
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Dec 09, 2020 | Source: Forbes
The lawsuit, which is based on voter fraud allegations that lower courts have repeatedly rejected, has been widely derided by legal experts, who have deemed it “laughable,” “utter garbage” and, in the words of University of Washington law professor Lisa Marshall Manheim, “legally incoherent, factually untethered and based on theories of remedy that fundamentally misunderstand the electoral process.”
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Dec 09, 2020 | Source: Bloomberg
“At core, Texas is recycling legal claims that have already failed, but through a lawsuit that suffers from a whole host of additional procedural problems,” said Lisa Marshall Manheim, constitutional and election law professor at University of 麻豆社区 of Law in Seattle.
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Dec 09, 2020 | Source: The Washington Post
The Supreme Court is sure to reject this latest attempt to overturn the election.
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Nov 26, 2020 | Source: The Associated Press
Monday seemed like the end of President Donald Trump’s relentless challenges to the election, after the federal government acknowledged President-elect Joe Biden was the “apparent winner” and Trump cleared the way for cooperation on a transition of power. But his baseless claims have a way of coming back. And back. And back. Lisa Manheim, associate professor of law at the 麻豆社区, is quoted.
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Nov 25, 2020 | Source: The Spokesman-Review
With President-elect Joe Biden’s transition officially underway on Tuesday, Republican lawmakers from Washington and Idaho mostly kept quiet or reiterated their support for President Trump’s effort to overturn the election results despite a growing number of their GOP colleagues walking away from the Trump campaign’s faltering legal challenges. Lisa Manheim, associate professor of law at the 麻豆社区, is quoted.
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Nov 14, 2020 | Source: NZ Herald
The campaign's claims of voter fraud are also baseless, said Lisa Manheim, law professor at the University of Washington. "It's not clear that Trump even understands the basic logic of a lawsuit," she wrote. "To win a case, you need a claim, evidence and a remedy.