The Guardian (USA)

US supreme court denies Republican bid to limit Pennsylvan­ia mail-in-voting

- Sam Levine in New York

The supreme court is allowing Pennsylvan­ia to count ballots received up to three days after the election, in a consequent­ial ruling that will likely mean thousands more votes are counted in one of the most critical swing states in the election.

The court on Monday rejected a Republican plea to pause a September ruling from Pennsylvan­ia’s state supreme court that allowed ballots to be counted as long as they are postmarked by election day and received up to three days later.

Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court’s three liberal justices in the ruling, producing a 4-4 deadlock. The even split means that the state supreme court’s ruling stands.

The ruling is a win for Democrats, who sought the extension in state court, and a loss for Republican­s, who had asked the US supreme court to intervene. Nearly 900,000 voters in Pennsylvan­ia have already returned their ballots, according to state data collected by Michael McDonald, a professor at the University of Florida.

The justices made the ruling after an emergency request from Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s and, as is customary in similar cases, offered no explanatio­n for their decision. Justices Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Clarence Thomas all said they would have granted the Republican request.

Pennsylvan­ia typically requires mail-in ballots to arrive by election night in order to count. But last month, the Pennsylvan­ia supreme court, citing potential postal service delays amid the Covid-19 pandemic, extended the deadline by three days, saying ballots should count as long as they are postmarked by election day. The court also required election officials to count ballots with no postmark or an illegible one.

In a typical election, only about 1% of mail-in ballots are rejected, but that number is expected to rise this year as more people vote by mail for the first time. One of the top reasons mailin ballots get rejected is because they arrive after election day. The decisions from the Pennsylvan­ia supreme court and US supreme court offer important insurance against that kind of disenfranc­hisement.

The ruling is a break from a string of rulings this year in which the US supreme court has upheld a swath of voting restrictio­ns across the country, even amid the Covid-19 pandemic. But the Pennsylvan­ia case had an important distinctio­n; while all the voting cases that have reached the supreme court this year have been from federal courts, the Pennsylvan­ia case came from a state court.

 ?? Photograph: Matt ?? The supreme court ruling is a win for Democrats, who sought the extension on election mail-in voting deadlines from Pennsylvan­ia’s state supreme court.
Photograph: Matt The supreme court ruling is a win for Democrats, who sought the extension on election mail-in voting deadlines from Pennsylvan­ia’s state supreme court.

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