Berger v. North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP
Docket No. | Op. Below | Argument | Opinion | Vote | Author | Term |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
21-248 | 4th Cir. | Mar 21, 2022 | Jun 23, 2022 | 8-1 | Gorsuch | OT 2021 |
Holding: The speaker of the North Carolina State House of Representatives and the president pro tempore of the North Carolina State Senate are entitled to intervene in this litigation challenging North Carolina"s voter-ID law.
Judgment: Reversed, 8-1, in an opinion by Justice Gorsuch on June 23, 2022. Justice Sotomayor filed a dissenting opinion.
SCOTUSblog Coverage
- Announcement of opinions for Thursday, June 23 (complete) (Angie Gou, June 23, 2022)
- North Carolina Republican lawmakers win right to intervene in court and defend states voter-ID law (Amy Howe, June 23, 2022)
- With Thomas in hospital, eight justices hear N.C. Republicans plea to intervene in voter-ID lawsuit (Amy Howe, March 22, 2022)
- In North Carolina voter-ID case, another question of intervention driven by partisan tension (Amy Howe, March 18, 2022)
- Two more cases involving religious exercise claims (John Elwood, March 16, 2022)
- Court sets quiet March argument calendar (Amy Howe, January 28, 2022)
- No new relists, but one likely grant in an international child custody case (John Elwood, December 2, 2021)
- Court will consider effort by North Carolina legislators to intervene to defend state voter-ID law (Amy Howe, November 24, 2021)
- Legislative intervention to defend a law (John Elwood, November 17, 2021)
- North Carolinas voter-ID lawsuit, racial bias in juries and a veterans disability claim (Andrew Hamm, September 3, 2021)