Supreme Court Gears Up To Decide If Elections End On Election Day
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Supreme Court Gears Up To Decide If Elections End On Election Day
‘This is a real opportunity for the Supreme Court to enforce the rule of law and to bring good election practices at the same time.’
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Does Election Day actually mean Election Day?
That’s the key issue the U.S. Supreme Court is going to consider when it holds oral arguments in a pivotal elections case next week.
Known as Watson v. RNC, the legal dispute centers around a challenge to a Mississippi law allowing election officials to accept mail-in ballots up to five business days after Election Day so long as they are postmarked on or before the day of the contest. The issue of accepting late-arriving ballots has become a prominent issue in elections in recent years, with more than a dozen states permitting such a practice.
In the case before SCOTUS, the justices will decide whether these state statutes violate existing federal laws that establish an election day for federal races. Speaking with The Federalist, Honest Elections Project Executive Director Jason Snead predicated that a favorable decision from the high court rendering them unconstitutional would go a long way in upholding the law and boosting Americans’ confidence and trust in elections.
“If you’re watching ballots trickle in and margins shrink, and you’re watching winners become losers and losers become winners after an election is over, then that invites skepticism, concerns about fraud, and ultimately, that’s going to sap public confidence and deter people from voting,” Snead told The Federalist. “This is a real opportunity for the Supreme Court to enforce the rule of law and to bring good election practices at the same time.”
As The Federalist previously reported, Mississippi initially adopted its current policy of accepting late-arriving ballots during the 2020 Covid outbreak. This change to the state’s election procedure was later codified into law.
The Magnolia State’s actions prompted the Republican National Committee (RNC) and Mississippi GOP to file a........
