The Louisiana Court of Appeal has reinstated the state’s lawsuit against a Mark Zuckerberg-funded nonprofit that flooded Democrat-controlled jurisdictions with election administration grants and, in the process, may have skewed election results.
Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry, a Republican, said the ruling was a major victory for election integrity.
The thinking behind the lawsuit is that the millions of dollars doled out by the left-leaning Chicago-based Center for Technology and Civic Life (CTCL) unfairly boosted turnout in Democrat-heavy parts of the state, functioning as a kind of subsidy to get Democrats, not Republicans, to the polls.
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, disagreed with Republican criticism of CTCL’s practices and vetoed state legislation banning the private financing of elections.
The lawsuit revived by the state appellate court is State of Louisiana v. Center for Tech and Civic Life, which was launched Oct. 2, 2020, a month before the most recent presidential election.
During the 2020 election cycle, billionaire Facebook founder Zuckerberg, along with his wife, Priscilla Chan, supporters of President Joe Biden and Democratic Party candidates, gave around $400 million to the CTCL.
The CTCL in turn then distributed the money in the form of grants to jurisdictions across the United States purportedly to help those governments hire more staff, buy mail-in ballot processing machinery, and pursue other measures they considered necessary to administer the elections during the ongoing pandemic. Critics nationwide complained that CTCL’s grants favored Democrats.
Landry filed suit, hoping to obtain a court order declaring that “private contributions to local election officials and the election system in general are unlawful and contrary to Louisiana law.” He argued that the grants from CTCL were part of “the corrosive influence of outside money on Louisiana election officials.”
But Lewis H. Pitman Jr., a district judge in St. Martin Parish, threw out Landry’s lawsuit, citing Louisiana’s state constitution in finding there was no legal justification to block “registrars of voters, clerks of court, or other local election officials from seeking and obtaining grant dollars to assist with the funding, the necessary staff, and equipment for the upcoming November 3, 2020 election.”
The constitution allows “political subdivisions” to “acquire property for any public purpose,” by way of “donation.” The trial court held that because “registrar[s] of voters and clerks of court are ‘political subdivisions,’” “they are allowed to accept private donations,” including to administer elections. The ruling allowed the private money to flow into the bank accounts of local governments, according to The Federalist report.
The Epoch Times reached out to the CTCL for comment but didn’t receive a reply by press time.