Maryland voting

Bernard v. Landry

Location: Louisiana
Status: Closed (Voluntarily Dismissed)
Last Update: May 19, 2026

What's at Stake

This case challenged Louisiana's attempt to suspend congressional primary elections after voting had already begin and tens of thousands of voters had already cast ballots. Plaintiffs argued that refusing to count those ballots violated the constitutional right to vote, and undermined the integrity of the electoral process.

Summary

On May 4, 2026, Louisiana voters and the League of Women Voters of Louisiana sued Louisiana Secretary of State Nancy Landry after Governor Jeff Landry issued an executive order purporting to suspend Louisiana's congressional primary elections after absentee and early voting had already begun.

Plaintiffs alleged that discarding already-cast ballots violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments and fundamentally undermined the fairness of the electoral process. They sought an order requiring Louisiana officials to preserve and count ballots already cast in the congressional primaries.

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