Los Angeles Times

Supreme Court split on Pennsylvan­ia’s mail ballot deadline

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court turned down an appeal from Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican leaders on Monday, and left in place a ruling that says latearrivi­ng mail ballots will be counted as long as they were mailed by election day.

The justices were split 4- 4, with four conservati­ves on one side, and Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. joining liberals on the other.

The decision has the effect of upholding a state Supreme Court ruling that allowed for counting mail ballots that arrive up to three days after Nov. 3 as long as they are postmarked or mailed by election day.

Pennsylvan­ia is a battlegrou­nd state, crucial to both President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden. Election officials anticipate the outcome there may turn on the nearly 3 million ballots that are likely to be sent by mail.

Monday’s decision is a victory for Democrats and voting rights advocates. They feared postal delays could result in mail ballots arriving after election day.

Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel A. Alito Jr., Neil M. Gorsuch and Brett M. Kavanaugh said they would have granted the appeals f iled by Republican leaders in the state Legislatur­e and the Pennsylvan­ia Republican Party, which said mail ballots should not be counted unless they arrived by election day.

It takes a majority to issue such an order, and with the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg last month, the court now has just eight justices.

Last year, the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e agreed to allow all of its registered voters to cast a ballot by mail, but also said these ballots must arrive by election day if they are to be counted.

But the county election boards struggled in June when the pandemic prompted more than 1 million in Pennsylvan­ia to switch to a mail- in ballot.

With the November election looming, the state Supreme Court agreed in September to rule on several disputes that arose from competing lawsuits. By a 4- 3 vote, the state justices agreed to “adopt” the recommenda­tion of Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar and extend the deadline for three days to allow for counting mail ballots that were posted by election day but arrived by Nov. 6.

The state judges cited a warning from a U. S. Postal Service lawyer who said there was a “significan­t risk” that ballots mailed at the end of October would not arrive in a county office by Nov. 3. They also noted that latearrivi­ng ballots from overseas military personnel are counted so long as they are postmarked by election day.

The state ruling was not a total victory for voting rights advocates, however. The state high court upheld a rule against counting a mail ballot that does not arrive inside a secured envelope.

Republican leaders of the state Legislatur­e and the Republican Party of Pennsylvan­ia filed separate emergency appeals with the Supreme Court, urging the justices to overrule the state high court on the issue of the late- arriving mail ballots. They said the extended deadline would invite fraud.

“This is an open invitation to voters to cast their ballots after election day, thereby injecting chaos and the potential for gamesmansh­ip into what was an orderly and secure schedule of a clear, bright- line deadline,” they wrote in Scarnati vs. Pennsylvan­ia Democratic Party.

The two sides presented sharply different views of the law. Pennsylvan­ia’s attorney general argued the state Supreme Court had ruled on a matter of state election law, which he said should be off- limits to the U. S. justices in Washington.

The state Republican leaders insisted that the national election day is set in federal law, and the Constituti­on gives the state Legislatur­e, not its courts, the authority to set the rules for a presidenti­al election.

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