I am exceptionally weary of this kind of argument:
Mobile lawyer Jim Zeigler filed the suit on behalf of Christian talk show host Kelly McGinley of Mobile, who alleges that she has been “disenfranchised” as a voter by the removal of Moore. The Court of the Judiciary expelled Moore for his refusal to obey a federal court order to move his Ten Commandments monument from the state Judicial Building rotunda.
If an elected official is removed through legitimate means, it is not disenfranchisement. If the cops show up and threaten to beat you up if you try to vote, that’s disenfranchisement, or if you aren’t allowed to vote because of your gender, that’s disenfranchisment.
If an elected official is impeached and removed, recalled, or removed through some other legal/constitutional means, that isn’t disenfranchisement.
If you failed to register, that’s your fault, not the state’s.
If you are late and the polls are closed, again the fault is yours.
If you can’t read the ballot, and therefore you’re not sure who you voted for, guess what?
If your candidates loses a really, really close election, and all the recounts go against you, your candidate lost, believe it or not.
And the list goes on…
Source: Pryor objects to Moore suit