Lodi News-Sentinel

U.S.: No right to certain service level for mail-in votes

- By Erik Larson

WASHINGTON — Delivery delays during an election can’t be unlawful, because the Constituti­on doesn’t guarantee states any particular level of service when it comes to mail-in ballots, the U.S. Postal Service told a federal judge.

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and President Donald Trump are seeking dismissal of a lawsuit brought by New York and other states that claim disruptive changes at the USPS over the summer are violating the Elections Clause of the Constituti­on by putting election mail at risk.

The Justice Department argued in a court filing Tuesday in Washington that the clause can’t restrict the government from carrying out operationa­l changes or other activity that “may have an incidental impact” on voting.

The states’ theory “assumes that because the plaintiff states crafted their election laws with the expectatio­n that USPS will provide a certain level of service, they now have a constituti­onal right to expect that level of service,” the U.S. said. The clause “does not shield states from any and all external circumstan­ces that may impact state elections.”

The changes — including the dismantlin­g of hundreds of highspeed mail-sorting machines and cuts to employee overtime and late delivery trips — triggered several lawsuits and nationwide injunction­s against the Postal Service. But the court orders haven’t reversed the service delays, and Republican­s and Democrats have been left to clash in courts across the country over rules for accepting ballots that arrive late even if they’re postmarked by Nov. 3.

The U.S. said in the filing that state lawmakers can change the rules for accepting ballots if they’re worried about delivery delays, although Republican legislatur­es have largely resisted such efforts.

“The states remain free to alter their policies to account for any fears over the performanc­e of USPS,” it said.

The Postal Service also blasted the states for suggesting that Trump’s negative comments about mail-in voting had anything to do with the changes put in place by DeJoy, a longtime Republican donor with no previous USPS experience.

The states “submit no evidence connecting these statements to the alleged USPS policy changes at issue,” it said. “Indeed, they do not cite to a single piece of evidence in the record suggesting that any of these alleged policy changes took place at the behest of the President.”

A judge handling another USPS case ruled in September that it was “easy to conclude” that DeJoy’s changes were intended to disrupt and challenge the legitimacy of the coming election, and that voter disenfranc­hisement was “at the heart” of the policies.

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