I believe argument and reference to the organic documents of the current government is required on the question of who has the authority to determine a remedy for the perceived violation. I note that except for one law setting the months in which elections are to be held, and a constitutional amendment to address the parameters of the election process, no other laws have been enacted on election and voting procedures since the current constitution came into force in December of 2007.
Given the authority of the Delegate to assure that the organic documents of the regional government are executed, as well as his authority to appoint and supervise officials of the Executive branch, given the responsibility of the Regional Assembly to provide or to choose to not provide, statutory laws to address matters not contained in the Constitution or the Bill of Rights, and given the power of the Council of Lower Officiels to oversee Executive actions, and to initiate emergency legislation for vote in the Regional Assembly on such terms as the CLO sets as appropriate, the Court may well be presented with an issue to determine who is authorized to resolve the matter.
The plaintiff, and others who wish to make a submission, are specifically asked to address this responsibility issue.
Edited to add the following: By "organic documents," I am referring collectively to the Bill of Rights, the Constitution, and the Legal Code. I strongly encourage interested parties to make reference to the Bill of Rights since those provisions have equal weight to the Constitution.