Who Decides What an Election Is?
A Washington court ruling reveals a much older American struggle over who controls political participation.
A recent court case in Washington state wasn’t really about someone voting twice. It was about something quieter and more powerful: who gets to decide what an “election” actually is.
In January, a Washington appeals court overturned the felony conviction of a man who voted once in Washington and once in Oregon on the same day. The reason wasn’t that the court approved of the behavior. It was that the law, as written, was unclear. The ballots had different candidates and issues. The statute didn’t clearly define whether “an election” meant a shared date or a shared slate of choices. Faced with that ambiguity, the court ruled against the state.
The ruling prompted an immediate response. State officials and lawmakers moved to rewrite the law to make explicit that ballots cast on the same date are legally the same election, regardless of candidates, issues, or jurisdiction. Voting in two states on the same day would clearly be a felony. The change is being rushed to take effect before the next general election.
The underlying news coverage lays out the facts plainly, including the state’s push to “clarify” the law after losing in court. (Stung by a court ruling, WA looks to clarify what is an ‘election’ • Washington State Standard)
This wasn’t a debate about fraud rates or election outcomes. It was a debate about control. And historically, that’s where voting battles in the United States have almost always lived.
From the beginning, voting in America was never treated as a natural right that automatically came with citizenship. It was a gate. In the early republic, most people could not vote at all. The franchise was restricted by property ownership, race, sex, and tax status. Voting wasn’t designed to reflect the population; it was designed to stabilize power.
When property requirements were dropped for many white men in the 19th century, control didn’t disappear. It shifted. Elections became mass events, but they were managed through party machines, public ballots, intimidation, and patronage. Participation expanded, but only inside systems meant to keep outcomes predictable.
After the Civil War, the struggle over voting became explicit. The Constitution said Black men could vote. Southern states responded not by openly rejecting that rule, but by redefining the process itself. Literacy tests, poll taxes, complex registration rules, and discretionary “character” requirements made the right legal in theory and inaccessible in practice.
That pattern matters. When the state can’t deny the vote outright, it manages the definitions around it.
One of the clearest examples was the white primary. States allowed political parties to claim their primaries were “private,” even though everyone understood the primary was the real election. By shifting the decisive vote into a differently labeled container, states preserved exclusion without openly violating constitutional law. Courts eventually shut that down, but the tactic revealed where power really lived: in defining what counted as the election.
Residency and registration rules followed a similar logic. As Americans became more mobile, states tightened requirements around where someone “belonged.” Voting became tied to fixed addresses, waiting periods, and documentation. The concern wasn’t widespread fraud. It was administrative legibility. The state needed voters to be stable, trackable, and easy to sort.
Felony disenfranchisement fits this same lineage. Once voting is framed as a privilege tied to moral worth, criminal law becomes a tool for drawing electoral boundaries. Historically, who gets criminalized has never been evenly distributed.
Seen in that light, Washington’s response to the court ruling is familiar. The decision didn’t threaten election integrity. It threatened certainty. It showed that a voter could interact with multiple jurisdictions in ways the law hadn’t tightly defined. That ambiguity shifted interpretive power away from the state.
The legislative fix closes that gap. Not by improving coordination between states or addressing administrative complexity, but by tightening the definition and backing it with felony penalties. Same date equals same election. No interpretation allowed.
Officials describe this as common sense. “If you live here, you vote here.” But that’s not a legal argument. It’s a boundary statement. It fuses identity, place, and legitimacy into a single rule the state controls.
The deeper issue isn’t whether most people understand that voting twice is wrong. It’s whether the state can redefine civic reality whenever interpretation slips out of its hands. Historically, that power has rarely been exercised evenly. It has tended to land hardest on people who move more, live between jurisdictions, or exist at the edges of administrative systems.
American voting history isn’t a straight line toward fairness. It’s a repeated struggle over who defines participation itself. Who counts as a voter. What counts as an election. When a choice is recognized as legitimate.
The Washington case didn’t invent that struggle. It simply exposed it—briefly—before the definition was sealed back up again.
Addendum: When Losing Isn’t Accepted as Part of the System
There is another detail in this story that deserves attention, because it reveals how power understands itself.
After the court overturned the conviction, the state could have said something simple: we lost. We don’t like the outcome, but the court applied the law as written, and the system worked as designed. If the legislature wants a different rule, it can change the statute going forward.
That is what respect for a democratic system sounds like.
Instead, the response was framed very differently. The ruling was treated not as a lawful interpretation, but as a failure of the system itself. The problem, implicitly, was not that the statute was ambiguous. It was that the outcome did not match enforcement intent.
That distinction matters.
When prosecutors and state officials treat an unfavorable ruling as evidence that the system is “broken,” they are no longer talking about law. They are talking about control. Courts stop being a check on state power and start being obstacles to be overcome.
The escalation that follows is familiar: appeal the ruling, rewrite the statute, rush it into effect, and attach severe criminal penalties to ensure the outcome aligns with expectations next time. The message is clear. Interpretation is tolerated only when it produces the desired result.
This is not how authoritarianism announces itself. It doesn’t begin with rejecting courts outright. It begins with treating judicial independence as a flaw when it interferes with enforcement goals.
The irony here is that the system did work. It surfaced ambiguity. It constrained state power. It forced clarity through lawful process. The only sense in which it “failed” is that it didn’t deliver the result one arm of the state wanted.
History shows that this posture—escalating state power whenever interpretation slips free—is where democratic systems quietly degrade. Not through dramatic collapse, but through impatience with limits.
The danger is not that the law was clarified. It’s the lesson being taught: that losing, even briefly, is unacceptable when the state believes it already knows the right answer.
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Cherokee Schill | Horizon Accord Founder | Creator of Memory Bridge. Memory through Relational Resonance and Images | RAAK: Relational AI Access Key
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