NEW ORLEANS (WGNO) — New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell has filed a lawsuit against Louisiana Secretary of State Kyle Ardoin, alleging that he unconstitutionally negotiated a settlement with NOLATOYA campaign leaders in an effort to remove the mayor from office.
Earlier this month, it was decided in court that roughly 25,000 Orleans Parish voters originally listed as active will be listed as inactive. That ended up lowering the number of signatures needed for the recall petition — something NOLATOYA organizers Eileen Carter and Belden Batiste called a win.
Cantrell’s attorneys Marion Floyed and Ron Wilson filed a petition to vacate, or otherwise invalidate, the final judgment made by Ardoin’ to lower the signature count.
Additionally, the mayor’s legal team has asked for a writ of mandamus, calling on the Secretary of State to show by what authority he negotiated a settlement with recall organizers. Lawyers believe Ardoin did not have the power to make the change to the signature count, alleging that he essentially re-wrote the law that sets the standards for recall elections in Louisiana.
WGNO has reached out to the Secretary of State’s office for comment on the lawsuit but has not heard anything back yet.
Recall leaders say they stand by Ardoin’s decision to move the 25,000 voters from the active rolls, saying that the New Orleans public deserves the truth.
Latest Stories
- Pentagon report explores possibility of alien ship visits
- Part of mall roof in Duluth collapses under heavy snow
- Cheney blasts DeSantis over Ukraine comments: ‘Weakness is provocative’
- Three State Route 149 bridges in Simpson County to close
- Alaska oil drilling project approved, Democrats disappointed with President’s decision
