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Civil Liberties & Rights Contact Civil Liberties & Rights Team

Our Work

The Civil Liberties Team monitors government activities at all levels for possible erosion of individual liberties as granted by the US Constitution. We strive to educate League of Women Voters members and the public about identified issues and encourage action based on League positions. Our approved partner is the United Nations Association of Northern Colorado.

Our Positions

The League of Women Voters of the United States believes in the individual liberties guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States. The League is convinced that individual rights now protected by the Constitution should not be weakened or abridged.


Know Your Civil Liberties

Civil liberties are your personal freedoms that are protected against government interference by the Constitution. These freedoms are enumerated in the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the US Constitution, and their counterparts in Article II of the Colorado Constitution. Civil rights are your personal rights and privileges that are not specifically protected by the Constitution but are protected by law.

RESOURCES

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Colorado Bill of Rights - Article II
Colorado Bill of Rights - Article II

Here's the path to the Colorado Bill of Rights. Please follow these steps:


  1. Click on this link: Colorado Bill of Rights: Article II
  2. Look a little down the page to Constitution of the State of Colorado.
  3. Click on the box with the + sign next to Constitution of the State of Colorado.
  4. Click on the box to the + sign next to Article II Bill of Rights.


Yes, there are a bunch of Sections!

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US Bill of Rights
US Bill of Rights

This webpage offers not only the text of each of the First Ten Amendments to the US Constitution, but also gives additional background information.

US Bill of Rights

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Church / State Divide

Freedom of Speech - Book Banning

Women's Rights

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This state requires schools to teach the Bible. Parents and teachers are suing
This state requires schools to teach the Bible. Parents and teachers are suing

Legal experts say this is a case other states will likely be watching, as it comes at a time when conservative state officials are testing the church-state divide. Read the Education Week article here. It includes links to related information. Read here

Evie Blad

Education Week

June, 2024

_____________________


Texas Education Board Backs Curriculum With Lessons Drawn From Bible

School districts serving more than two million elementary-school children would be able to adopt a curriculum that draws on the Bible. Read about it here.

New York Times

Troy Closson

11/19/24

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Colorado may strike religious preference rule for preschools in the UPK program
Colorado may strike religious preference rule for preschools in the UPK program

A rule allowing religious preschools to prioritize children from their congregations has been recommended to be repealed by the committee that guides the operations of Colorado’s popular universal preschool program. Read about it here.


CPR News

October 10, 2024

Jenny Brundin

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The genesis of christian nationalism
The genesis of christian nationalism

In recent years, the Christian right has become an increasingly powerful force in American politics. The belief that God has called on conservative Christians to rule over society has extended into all levels of government, from school boards to the White House. Read about the history of the movement here.


ProPublica

October 26, 2024

Phoebe Petrovic, Wisconsin Watch

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Book bans a form of political action rather than censorship and mainly targeting women of color say CU researchers
Book bans a form of political action rather than censorship and mainly targeting women of color say CU researchers

Authors who are women of color are disproportionately targeted by book bans and bans appear to be about galvanizing voters in shrinking conservative counties, according to two findings in a new CU Boulder study. Read here.

CPR News

July 3, 2024

Jenny Brundin


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Texas condemned for placing book on colonization in library
Texas condemned for placing book on colonization in library

Outcry in Montgomery county as Linda Coombs’ book on European colonization of Native American land reclassified. Read about it here.


The Guardian

October 21, 2024

Richard Luscombe

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Removing books from libraries often takes debate. But there's a quieter way.
Removing books from libraries often takes debate. But there's a quieter way.

Weeding, or culling old, damaged or outdated books, is standard practice in libraries. But in some cases it is being used to remove books because of the viewpoint they express. Read all about it here.


New York Times

October 8, 2024

Elizabeth A. Harris

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A list of all the ways DeSantis has tried to meddle in Florida’s abortion ballot measure
A list of all the ways DeSantis has tried to meddle in Florida’s abortion ballot measure

Officials in Republican states have waged legal battles and other efforts to thwart abortion ballot measures or to influence their language. Florida stands out. Read here.

The 19th* News(letter)

October 23, 2024

Grace Panetta

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LWV and the Equal Rights Amendment
LWV and the Equal Rights Amendment

The LWVUS has been promoting the Equal Rights Amendment to be added to the US Constitution. The link will take you to a LWVUS FAQ page that will give you a wide variety of information about what the ERA is, what it is working to achieve, how it's implementation would impact aspects of women's lives, and where the proposed amendment is in the process of becoming a reality. You can access the information here.




Rights & Liberties: Misc.

Racial Justice

Voting Rights

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Colorado civil rights commission has zero geographic diversity, audit says
Colorado civil rights commission has zero geographic diversity, audit says

No Republican has been appointed to the commission since Gov. Jared Polis took office in 2019. Read about it here Colorado Civil Rights Commission Article

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The new Project 1798 is a wake-up call
The new Project 1798 is a wake-up call

Michael Waldman

BRENNAN CENTER FOR JUSTICE at NYU: The Briefing

October 15, 2024


In 1798, Congress passed the Alien and Sedition Acts. These laws criminalized dissent, abused civil liberties, and violated the Constitution. They are among the most notorious laws in history. One is still on the books, the Alien Enemies Act of 1798.


The law has only been used three times: During the War of 1812. During World War I. And most notoriously, to imprison tens of thousands of innocent noncitizens of Japanese, German, and Italian descent in internment camps during World War II.


Thomas Jefferson decried the Alien and Sedition Acts as part of a “reign of witches.” Recently, Donald Trump called the last of these laws something else. Let’s call it Project 1798.


This past weekend, Trump pledged to launch “Operation Aurora,” a plan to deploy the military on U.S. soil to seize, detain, and deport immigrants he deems dangerous. “Can you imagine? Those were the old days when they had tough politicians, have to go back that long,” he told a rally on Saturday. “Think of that, 1798. Oh, it's a powerful act. You couldn't pass something like that today.”


To be clear, such a step would be illegal. As my colleague Katherine Yon Ebright notes in her comprehensive review of the law, it can only be used when there is “a declared war between the United States and any foreign nation or government,” or where a government has militarily invaded the country. It’s a wartime statute, as the Supreme Court has confirmed, that allows presidents to detain or deport the natives and citizens of an enemy nation.


This would violate basic civil liberties, and one hopes that courts would uphold the Bill of Rights. But the Supreme Court previously refused to step in to police postwar uses of the law, reasoning that the continued existence of a war was a “political” question beyond the purview of judges. And that was a Court with a reasonable track record for integrity. Let’s get real: Should we trust this Supreme Court to stand up for the rule of law and strike down a peacetime abuse of the Alien Enemies Act?


Congress should repeal the Alien Enemies Act. That is a step that should have been taken long ago. And there are other dusty and little-used statutes that could be abused by an aggressive president. Too often, we rely on presidential self-restraint rather than enforceable protections for the public.


The Insurrection Act dates back to 1807. A president last used it to send troops to quell violence in Los Angeles more than three decades ago. Trump has vowed to use it as part of his mass deportation scheme. As the Brennan Center has documented, there are few guardrails to prevent a president from abusing this law.


The National Emergencies Act allows a president to declare an emergency, with few guideposts, and grants extraordinary power when that happens. It is appropriately used when there is, well, an emergency — a terrorist attack or a massive electrical grid failure, for example. It should not be invoked to pursue policy goals such as those around immigration.


A bipartisan group of lawmakers understands the risks. Last month, two congressional committees backed reform legislation that would require Congress to approve an emergency declaration within 30 days. Presidents could act with dispatch, but the Constitution’s checks and balances would stay strong too.

All these laws, so subject to abuse, are often at the heart of the worst episodes in American history. The eminent historian Gordon Wood, writing in the Oxford History of the United States, called the Alien and Sedition Acts a “disastrous mistake” that “thoroughly destroyed the Federalists’ historical reputation.” More than two centuries later, Congress has an opportunity to end the disgrace.

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Governors Launch Initiative to Protect American Democracy
Governors Launch Initiative to Protect American Democracy

Governors Pritzker and Polis Lead Launch of Nonpartisan Governors’ Initiative to Fortify Essential Democratic Rights Nationwide. Here's the statement from Governor Polis' office describing the Initiative. Read about it here.



Read this Denver Post article.

“Increasing threats of autocracy” spur Jared Polis to join Illinois governor in new initiative ahead of 2nd Trump term


Democrats announce group after Donald Trump’s election — but don’t tie it to incoming administration

Nick Coltrain - Staff portraits in The Denver Post studio on October 5, 2022. (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)By Nick Coltrain | ncoltrain@denverpost.com | The Denver Post

UPDATED: November 13, 2024 at 3:03 AM MST


A week after former President Donald Trump won a return to the White House, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis has joined with Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker to announce a new effort “pushing back against increasing threats of autocracy,” as Pritzker described it.

But both Democratic governors shied away from pointing the initiative directly at the incoming Republican administration.

The new effort, dubbed Governors Safeguarding Democracy, stands apart from the longstanding National Governors Association — which Polis now chairs — and the party-aligned Republican and Democratic governors associations. It aims to corral governors’ offices, think tanks, legal experts, and democracy and open government advocates “to shape policy and plans that truly protect the rule of law,” Polis said ahead of a formal Wednesday announcement.

The governors positioned it as a potential bipartisan group against overreach, though Pritzker declined to name any Republicans currently in office he’s talking to.

Its governing board includes two former Republican governors, Arne Carlson of Minnesota and Bill Weld of Massachusetts, according to a list of names shared on a call with reporters on Tuesday. Neither man held the office in the 21st century.

“This is about whatever threats come our way at the federal level. It’s not about a particular threat,” Polis said during the media call. He listed election systems, the independent judiciary and constitutional principles as key areas of concern.

“It’s about being proactive around educating people,” he said, “and making sure governors have the tool kit to support our small-d democratic institutions as well as, of course, reacting effectively and coordinating (the) response to any threats to our democracy that come from any president or from foreign powers.”

The unmistakable context surrounding the announcement was worry among the governors’ fellow Democrats about the prospect of Trump’s second term in office after he won last week’s election.

Pritzker said the example of Trump aide Stephen Miller proposing to send National Guard troops from red states to blue ones to enforce federal immigration policy is an example of one question the new group aims to answer. Pritzker called such a potential use of the National Guard “unacceptable,” while Polis said that making sure the military is not used for domestic police actions is part of the mission of safeguarding democracy, as well as protecting the constitutional order.

Polis and Pritzker referenced the incoming administration only in response to questions from the media, even as the two have pledged varying degrees of pushback toward perceived federal oversteps.

Pritzker on Friday told Chicago media: “To anyone that comes to take away freedom and dignity of Illinoisans, I would remind you that a happy warrior is still a warrior. You come for my people, you come through me.”


Related Articles

Polis, who declined multiple requests for interviews from The Denver Post last week, said in a previous written statement that Colorado “will do everything in our power to protect all Coloradans and our freedoms.”

Trump has made mass deportations a priority of his new administration, raising concerns among immigrant rights activists. Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser has raised a specific concern about Coloradans losing access to the abortion drug mifepristone.

Public lands are also set to be the center of a fight between conservationists and energy production advocates. Colorado, meanwhile, is one of the only states to shift further blue in the Nov. 5 election amid a nationwide right turn.

Stay up-to-date with Colorado Politics by signing up for our weekly newsletter, The Spot.

Originally Published: November 13, 2024 at 3:00 AM MST




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How Coloradans can protect themselves in fascist America
How Coloradans can protect themselves in fascist America

Central to the MAGA movement is hostility toward immigrants, LGBTQ+ people, women and anyone who opposes it politically. Now they could be targets.


Quenten Young wrote this Commentary featured on the November 15, 2024 in the Colorado Newsline. Read it here.

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How racism in a Colorado middle school left one student with PTSD
How racism in a Colorado middle school left one student with PTSD

How racism in a Colorado middle school left one student with PTSD. Read about it here.


Similar problem in Pueblo school reported by CPR News here.


CPR News

October 23, 2024

Jenny Brundin

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Colorado has made it easier for Native communities to vote, but barriers remain
Colorado has made it easier for Native communities to vote, but barriers remain

High-quality, up-to-date, nonpartisan voting information is slow to reach the Southern Ute and Ute Mountain tribes in rural Colorado. Read about it here.

Colorado Sun

November 2, 2024

Dalia Singer


Immigrants' Rights

LGBTQ+ Rights

Privacy & Technology

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Why Trump's immigration crackdown could overwhelm Colorado courts
Why Trump's immigration crackdown could overwhelm Colorado courts

"Advocates and attorneys in Colorado and nationwide are gearing up to defend immigrants against "Operation Aurora" and the mass deportations that President-elect Trump has threatened once in office."


This article is by Alayna Alvarez of Axios Denver. You can read it here.