The Oklahoman

Supreme Court issues flurry of last-minute election orders

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — 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.

There also is a difference in how the justices act based on whether they are ruling on a lawsuit that began in state or federal court.

Conservati­ve justices who hold a majority on the Supreme Court object to what they see as intrusions by federal judges who order last- minute changes to state election rules, even in the middle of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The power to alter absentee ballot deadlines and other voting issues rests with state legislatur­es, not federal courts, according to the conservati­ve justices.

The court also is divided, but so far has been willing to allow state courts interpreti­ng their own state constituti­ons to play more of a role than their federal counterpar­ts.

Last week, four conservati­ve justices would have put on hold a Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court ruling allowing three additional days to receive and count mailed ballots. Three justices in Wednesday's order about North Carolina's absentee ballots would have blocked a six- day extension.

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, or in a less tense setting that might not affect the 2020 vote, but would apply in the future.

Even a decision that only looked ahead to future elections would be “concerning given that state courts have often been more protective of the right to vote under state constituti­ons then the federal courts have under the U. S. Constituti­on,” University of Kentucky law professor Joshua Douglas said.

One more asterisk: new Justice Amy Coney Barrett has not taken part in any of these last-minute orders, but could participat­e going forward.

Here are some statespeci­fic explanatio­ns of what has taken place over the past 10 days:

Pennsylvan­ia

Last week, before Barrett had been confirmed, the justices divided 4- 4, a tie vote that allowed the threeday extension ordered by the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court to remain in effect.

On Wednesday, the court said it would not grant a quick, pre-election review to a new Republican appeal to exclude absentee ballots received after Election Day in the battlegrou­nd state.

But it remained unclear whether those ballots will ultimately be counted.

The court's order left open the possibilit­y that the justices could take up and decide after the election whether a three-day extension to receive and count absentee ballots ordered by Pennsylvan­ia's high court was proper.

The issue would take on enormous importance if Pennsylvan­ia turns out to be the crucial state in next week's election and the votes received between Nov. 3 and Nov. 6 are potentiall­y decisive.

The Supreme Court ruled hours after Pennsylvan­ia's Department of State agreed to segregate ballots received in the mail after polls close on Tuesday and before 5 p.m. on Nov. 6. Without keeping those ballots separate, Pennsylvan­ia might have risked having the state's overall vote count called into question.

Three conservati­ve justices signaled their interest in the court's eventual review of the case.

North Carolina

The court on Wednesday refused to block an extra six days to receive and count absentee ballots in North Carolina.

The State Board of Elections lengthened the period from three to nine days because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, pushing back the deadline to Nov. 12. The board's decision was part of a legal settlement with a unionaffil­iated group. The extension was approved by a state judge.

Lawmakers had previously set Nov. 6 as the deadline for mailed ballots because of the pandemic.

There's no order or recommenda­tion in North Carolina that ballots received after Nov. 6 be kept apart.

Justice Neil Gorsuch said courts should not be second- guessing the legislatur­e. The election board and the state judge “worked together to override a carefully tailored legislativ­e response to COVID,” Gorsuch wrote.

Wisconsin

In Wisconsin, ballots must arrive by Election Day, Nov. 3, to be counted.

The Supreme Court on Monday refused to reinstate a lower-court order that would have added six days to the deadline, identical to the extension granted primary voters in April. A federal appeals court already had blocked the additional days.

This time, it was the court's liberals who objected. “As the COVID pandemic rages, the Court has failed to adequately protect the Nation's voters,” Justice Elena Kagan wrote in dissent.

Again, there was nothing from the court explaining its order, but Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Gorsuch all wrote separate opinions.

“Different bodies of law and different precedents govern these two situations and require, in these particular circumstan­ces, that we allow the modificati­on of election rules in Pennsylvan­ia but not Wisconsin,” Roberts wrote, before the court had acted in the North Carolina case.

Kavanaugh's opinion drew outsized attention because he invoked the court's Bush v. Gore case that effectivel­y resolved the 2000 presidenti­al election in favor of Republican George W. Bush.

The Supreme Court has never cited Bush v. Gore in an opinion of the court. In 2000, in its unsigned majority opinion the court wrote, “Our considerat­ion is limited to the present circumstan­ces.”

But three lawyers who worked for Bush's cause in 2000, Roberts, Kavanaugh and now Barrett, sit on the court.

 ?? [PATRICK SEMANSKY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? A woman and man pray Tuesday outside the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington, the day after the Senate confirmed Amy Coney Barrett to become a Supreme Court justice.
[PATRICK SEMANSKY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] A woman and man pray Tuesday outside the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington, the day after the Senate confirmed Amy Coney Barrett to become a Supreme Court justice.

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