The Commercial Appeal

Tenn. high court keeps mail voting expansion

- Jonathan Mattise ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Tennessee Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that it will not block a judge's order offering a by-mail voting option to all eligible voters during the coronaviru­s pandemic while the state continues to appeal.

The Tennessee high court did agree with the state's wish to fast-track the appeal without a lower appellate court considerin­g it. But a majority of justices voted against stopping the absentee voting expansion pending appeal, dealing a blow to the state's efforts to unravel the expansion as the Aug. 6 primary approaches.

Voters are able to apply for absentee ballots through July 30. The primary election will be headlined by a contested Republican race for an open U.S. Senate seat.

State election officials have opposed the expansion, instead recommendi­ng preparatio­ns as though all 1.4 million registered voters 60 and older will cast mail-in ballots in the primary. Historical­ly, Tennessee has historical­ly seen less than 2.5% of votes cast by mail, the state has said.

The state argued such an expansion wouldn't be feasible for the 2020 elections, claiming lack of money, personnel and equipment for increased voting by mail, among other concerns.

The court wrote that it carefully considered the state's request for a stay, but “a majority of the Court finds that the State has not met its burden of demonstrat­ing that the balance of the relevant factors weighs in favor of a stay pending appeal.”

A Nashville judge, Davidson County Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle, ordered the expansion in a ruling earlier this month amid the pandemic.

The week after the decision, she told state officials “shame on you” for not abiding by her order when the state decided to reword its absentee voting applicatio­ns on its own and hold off on sending absentee applicatio­ns related to COVID-19 for hours after the initial ruling.

Only a handful of states are not offering by-mail voting for everyone during the pandemic, though two-thirds of states allowed the practice before the outbreak.

The state had since reworked the form and sent local officials updated guidance based on the judge's new orders.

More than a dozen categories of registered voters can typically cast absentee ballots in Tennessee, from all those 60 and over to people who are ill.

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