Supreme Court Lets States Accept Votes After Election Day
www.nationalreview.com
Counting mail-in ballots in Lehigh County, Pa., November 4, 2020.(Rachel Wisniewski/Reuters)
The Court’s decision on mail-in voting deadlines leaves more questions unanswered.
The Supreme Court this morning, in Watson v. Republican National Committee, ruled that states are not barred by federal law from counting ballots that arrive after Election Day. The Court’s 5–4 opinion, written by Justice Amy Coney Barrett, upheld a Mississippi law allowing ballots to be counted if they arrived five days after the election. The law’s challengers argued that the federal Election Day statutes require the election to be completed no later than the day set by Congress for the election. The decision is a win for federalism, and its sweep is narrow, but it is nonetheless a loss ...
Continue reading this article with an NRPLUS subscription.
America 250 Special Offer: 6 Months of NRPLUS for $17.76.
The Court has given the president full control of one of the three branches of constitutional government — and created a separate fourth branch in the Fed.
Dan McLaughlin
We’d like to send you notifications of our latest news and opinion. Unsubscribe anytime.