Miami Herald

Supreme Court issues flurry of last-minute election orders

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North Carolina, yes. Pennsylvan­ia, yes. Wisconsin, no. That’s how the Supreme Court has answered questions in recent days about an extended timeline for receiving and counting ballots in those states.

In each case, Democrats backed the extensions and Republican­s opposed them. All three states have Democratic governors and legislatur­es controlled by the GOP.

At first blush, the difference in the outcomes at the Supreme Court seems odd because the high court typically takes up issues to harmonize the rules across the country. But elections are largely governed by states, and the rules differ from one state to the next.

A big asterisk: These cases are being dealt with on an emergency basis in which the court issues orders that either block or keep in place a lower-court ruling. But there is almost never an explanatio­n of the majority’s rationale, though individual justices sometimes write opinions that partially explain the matter.

The justices did not finally resolve the legal issues involved, but they could do so after the election. A more thorough examinatio­n could come either in a post-election challenge that could determine the presidenti­al winner if, for example, Pennsylvan­ia proves critical to the national outcome.

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