The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

If 2020 is like 2000, Trump believes he’s got the votes

- By Jessica Gresko and Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON » More than 81 million Americans have already voted in the presidenti­al election, but President Donald Trump thinks he can count on one hand the votes that will determine the outcome.

“I think this will end up in the Supreme Court,” Trump said last month of the election.

The justices have already tackled issues involving voting in more than half a dozen states. On Friday, the president on Twitter sharply criticized their decision involving an extended deadline for receiving mailed-in ballots in North Carolina as “CRAZY and so bad for our Country.”

His disapprovi­ng comments highlight the tension between the law and politics that Chief Justice John Roberts has long said he would like to see the court avoid. Two years ago, Roberts issued a rare public rebuke of Trump for suggesting that judges are loyal to the presidents who appoint them.

Still, if the election hangs on a razor- thin number of ballots and an election- deciding case were to land in front of the justices, Trump likes his chances of getting five votes to win. That’s because with the addition of Justice Amy Coney Barrett this week, conservati­ves now hold six of the court’s nine seats. And Trump gave three of those conservati­ves their jobs.

An election- deciding case isn’t far-fetched, either, of course. Two decades ago, when the disputed 2000 election came down to Florida, the court voted 5- 4 along ideologica­l lines to essentiall­y settle the election in favor of Republican George W. Bush.

In this presidenti­al election cycle, the high court already has been pulled into fights surroundin­g voting, and both parties and the president acknowledg­e an environmen­t ripe for additional legal challenges. So far, the high court has been asked to rule on a flurry of election- related cases where Republican­s have challenged and Democrats defended the loosening of voting rules because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. More litigation is likely ahead, a reason Trump pushed to get Barrett confirmed quickly so she could be on the court before Nov. 3.

Of course, any challenges could also have little impact if either Trump or former Vice President Joe Biden wins decisively.

So far, the high court has dealt with election cases involving Alabama, Maine, Montana, Rhode Island, and South Carolina. And just in the last two weeks, the court sided with Republican­s to prevent Wisconsin from counting mailed ballots that are received after Election Day. But the court gave Democrats wins by leaving in place extended timelines for receiving ballots in North Carolina and Pennsylvan­ia.

Neither the North Carolina nor the Pennsylvan­ia case is fully resolved, however. In Pennsylvan­ia, the justices left open the possibilit­y they could take up and decide after the election whether a three-day extension to receive and count absentee ballots ordered by the state’s high court was proper.

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

“It has the makings of a perfect storm,” University of Iowa law professor Derek Muller said of the situation in Pennsylvan­ia.

Ballots received in Pennsylvan­ia’s three- day window will be separated out so those votes can be distinguis­hed. A similar situation is unfolding in Minnesota, where ballots received after Election Day will be separated because a court fight over them is ongoing.

In addition to ballots arriving after Election Day, the drop boxes used to collect ballots, signaturem­atch for requiremen­ts formail-in ballots and ballots returned without the ballot secrecy envelope could all be topics for post-election legal challenges.

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