Gulf Times

Judge blocks changes to US Postal Service ahead of election

-

Afederal judge has blocked controvers­ial changes to the US postal service, saying they were “a politicall­y motivated attack” that had slowed the nation’s mail and likely would slow the delivery of ballots in the upcoming presidenti­al election.

US district judge Stanley Bastian in Yakima, Washington, said he was issuing a nationwide injunction sought by 14 states in a case against President Donald Trump, postmaster general Louis DeJoy, and the US Postal Service over July changes to the service.

The 14 states, led by Washington, had filed a motion for a preliminar­y injunction asking the court to immediatel­y halt a “leave mail behind” policy that required postal trucks to leave at certain times, regardless of whether mail was loaded.

The states also asked for all election mail be treated as firstclass mail, for the replacemen­t of necessary sorting machines that had been removed, and for the postal service to abide by DeJoy’s commitment to suspend the changes until after the November 3 election.

DeJoy, a Trump supporter, said in August that he would halt many of the cost-cutting changes he put in place until after the presidenti­al election after Democrats accused him of trying to put his thumb on the scales to help Trump, which he has denied.

A surge in mail-in ballots is expected because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“The states have demonstrat­ed that the defendants are involved in a politicall­y motivated attack on the efficiency of the postal service,” the judge said after about two-and-a-half hours of arguments that Reuters heard by phone.

“They have also demonstrat­ed that this attack on the postal service is likely to irreparabl­y harm the states’ ability to administer the 2020 general election.”

The judge said the preliminar­y injunction would essentiall­y be issued as the states requested and he would file a written order with details later.

US Postal Service spokesman Dave Partenheim­er said while the agency was exploring its legal options, it was “ready and committed to handle whatever volume of election mail it receives.

“Our number one priority is to deliver election mail on-time,” Partenheim­er said.

Lee Moak, election mail committee chair of the postal service’s board of governors, called any suggestion of a politicall­y motivated attack on efficiency “completely and utterly without merit.”

At the hearing, Kristin Beneski, a lawyer for the Washington attorney general, told the judge critical mail already had been delayed for weeks at a time, including ballots.

She also noted reports that postal trucks had left for crosscount­ry trips empty.

Attorney Joseph Borson, who represente­d the defendants, said the postal service was prepared to timely deliver election mail and that the problems have largely been resolved.

He also said that the states were required to bring the matter to the Postal Regulatory Commission, not the courts.

“The postal service has and will continue to do extraordin­ary efforts to ensure all ballots are delivered,” Borson said, but added there are “physical limits to what it’s able to do.”

Besides Washington, states joining the lawsuit include Colorado, Connecticu­t, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin.

Similar lawsuits by states are pending in Pennsylvan­ia and New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar