USA TODAY US Edition

Judge puts a halt to Postal Service’s moves

- Kristie Cattafi

A federal judge halted the U.S. Postal Service’s move to dismantle mail-sorting machines, remove mailboxes and slice employee overtime across the United States.

Last month, New Jersey joined New York City and state and three other jurisdicti­ons’ lawsuit claiming the Trump administra­tion was trying to undermine the fall election.

“A federal judge just issued an order in our case halting the Trump Administra­tion’s efforts to interfere with mail delivery in advance of the election,” New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal said in a tweet Sunday. “We will have a free and fair election.”

The suit was filed in U.S. District Court a day after Postmaster General Louis DeJoy promised Congress that delivering election mail on time this fall would be his “No. 1 priority.”

The Trump administra­tion previously said it’s simply trying to reform a deeply indebted agency with longstandi­ng financial problems.

But Democrats say the actions taken by DeJoy, an ally of President Donald Trump and a major Republican donor, are a blatant attempt to interfere with a mid-pandemic election whose results may be decided through the mailbox rather than the ballot box.

The complaint was also joined by Hawaii and the city and county of San Francisco. It claims that the service’s changes are illegal, harmful and violate the U.S. Constituti­on by interferin­g with states’ authority to set their own election rules.

DeJoy backtracke­d and said he would suspend some of the changes he originally ordered following national outcry that focused on the threat of the election and a delivery slowdown for essentials like prescripti­on drugs.

“We will do everything we can to handle and deliver election mail in a manner consistent with the proven processes and procedures that we have relied upon for years,” DeJoy said last month.

Since then, the U.S. House of Representa­tives passed a $25 billion measure to fund the Postal Service, but it is considered unlikely to pass the Republican­controlled Senate.

The lawsuit claims the Postal Service was required to hold a public hearing on the overhaul before the Postal Regulatory Commission. The agency’s recent decisions abdicate its duties and could hurt vulnerable citizens who get mail-delivered medicine, Grewal said in his statement.

“Americans will vote by mail in record numbers this November and the Postal Service’s dramatic changes threaten to disenfranc­hise voters by disrupting mail service,” Grewal previously said. “We will continue working with other state attorneys general to protect the election and voter rights.”

 ??  ?? Grewal
Grewal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States