๐Ÿ“‚ This article is part of our The Paper Ballot Fight investigation
  1. Court Rules No Jurisdiction on Paper Ballot Ordinance Challenge: Case Heads to Arkansas Supreme Court You are here Feb 18, 2026
  2. Independence County Election Commission: Precinct Consolidation Analysis Feb 19, 2026
  3. The County Attorney Who Built the Weapon and Wielded It Feb 19, 2026
  4. They Declared an Emergency So Voters Couldn't Fight Back Feb 19, 2026
  5. Inside the AAC War Room: A Day-by-Day Account of How County Officials Coordinated to Kill Paper Ballot Petitions Feb 19, 2026
  6. The Neutral Fact Sheet: How County Officials Shaped Public Information While Fighting Paper Ballots in Court Feb 19, 2026
  7. Your County Attorney on the Record: "We're Hoping That It's Reversed" Feb 19, 2026
  8. How the Association of Arkansas Counties Used Your Tax Dollars to Fight Your Right to Vote Feb 22, 2026
โœ“ High Confidence Sources: court filings, public records, legal documents

Court Rules No Jurisdiction on Paper Ballot Ordinance Challenge: Case Heads to Arkansas Supreme Court

Judge Declines Jurisdiction on Quorum Court Paper Ballot Repeal

Batesville, AR : February 18, 2026

In a hearing held today in Independence County, the presiding judge ruled that he does not have jurisdiction over the legal challenge to the Quorum Court’s repeal of the paper ballot ordinance.

Background

In 2024, citizens of Independence County successfully petitioned for and passed Ordinance 2024-18, the Hand Marked, Hand Counted Paper Ballot Ordinance. The ordinance was repealed by the Quorum Court in December 2025 via Ordinance 2025-27, passing on a 9-0 roll call vote.

County Attorney Daniel Haney cited a state supreme court ruling on petition filing dates as legal justification for the repeal, arguing that the original petition “was filed during a time frame that was constitutional at the time but has since been ruled unconstitutional.”

Today’s Ruling

The judge determined that the matter falls outside his court’s jurisdiction, effectively leaving the Quorum Court’s repeal in place at the county level for now.

Next Steps: Arkansas Supreme Court

With the lower court declining jurisdiction, the case is expected to move to the Arkansas Supreme Court. This elevates the paper ballot issue from a local dispute to a statewide constitutional question about citizen-initiated ordinances and the authority of quorum courts to repeal them.

Why This Matters

The citizens of Independence County exercised their lawful right to petition their government. The Quorum Court repealed that citizen-initiated ordinance. Now the courts have declined to intervene at the local level. The Arkansas Supreme Court will ultimately decide whether county governments can override the will of their own voters on election integrity measures.

Independence Watch will continue to track this case as it progresses. All related FOIA requests and documents are available on our FOIA Tracker.