Current:Home > NewsRepublican lawsuits challenge mail ballot deadlines. Could they upend voting across the country? -Wealth Pursuit Network
Republican lawsuits challenge mail ballot deadlines. Could they upend voting across the country?
View
Date:2025-04-15 03:27:15
Republicans are challenging extended mail ballot deadlines in at least two states in a legal maneuver that could have widespread implications for mail voting ahead of this year’s presidential election.
A lawsuit filed last week in Mississippi follows a similar one last year in North Dakota, both brought in heavily Republican states before conservative federal courts. Democratic and voting rights groups are concerned about the potential impact beyond those two states if a judge rules that deadlines for receiving mailed ballots that stretch past Election Day violate federal law.
They say it’s possible such a decision would lead to a nationwide injunction similar to one last year when a Texas judge temporarily paused the FDA’s approval of the abortion pill mifepristone.
“This effort risks disenfranchising Mississippi voters, but we don’t want that to also be precedent for other states,” Abhi Rahman, communications director of the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee, said in response to the most recent lawsuit.
Mississippi and North Dakota are among 19 states that accept late-arriving mailed ballots as long as they are postmarked on or before Election Day, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. That includes political swing states such as Nevada and North Carolina. Some, including Colorado, Oregon and Utah, rely heavily on mail voting.
Former President Donald Trump has long railed against the use of mail voting, in particular when many states expanded its use during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, when he lost his reelection bid to Democrat Joe Biden. He has falsely claimed that changing vote tallies after Election Day are an indication of widespread fraud. And in the wake of his loss, several Republican-controlled states moved to tighten rules around mail voting.
The Republican National Committee, the Mississippi Republican Party, a member of the state Republican Executive Committee and an election commissioner in one county filed a federal lawsuit on Friday against Secretary of State Michael Watson and six local election officials.
The suit challenges a Mississippi law that says absentee ballots in presidential elections will be counted if they are postmarked by Election Day and received within five days. It argues that Mississippi improperly extends the federal election beyond the election date set by Congress and that, as a result, “timely, valid ballots are diluted by untimely, invalid ballots.”
“Federal law is very clear – Election Day is the Tuesday after the first Monday in November,” RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said in a statement announcing the lawsuit. “However, some states accept and count ballots days and days after Election Day, and we believe that practice is wrong.”
RNC spokesperson Gates McGavick said the group hopes to obtain a judicial precedent before November’s presidential election that state deadlines allowing ballots to be received after Election Day violate federal law.
“This case could have major ramifications in future elections — not just in Mississippi but across the country,” he said.
Democratic state Rep. Bryant Clark called the Mississippi lawsuit “another effort to try to stifle votes and stop the votes of a certain segment of the population.” He said the suit may also lead to similar efforts across the country.
Thessalia Merivaki, a political science professor at Mississippi State University, said the state’s mail voting process is already difficult to navigate and that eliminating the five-day window would “unfairly punish” voters.
In North Dakota, a similar federal lawsuit against the state election director was filed by the conservative Public Interest Legal Foundation on behalf of a county auditor, Mark Splonskowski, who cited what he said is a conflict between state and federal law. A court is expected to decide soon whether he has standing to bring the lawsuit.
Foundation spokesperson Lauren Bowman said while the lawsuit deals with North Dakota’s law, a ruling that finds extended ballot deadlines violate federal law would affect other states with similar policies.
State Election Director Erika White has asked the case to be dismissed. Her attorneys characterized the county auditor’s lawsuit as “a bid to overthrow longstanding North Dakota law and rewrite it according to his own preference.” Attorneys with the U.S. Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division filed a statement of interest in the case defending the existing state law, saying it was consistent with federal law and ensures that military and overseas ballots would be counted.
North Dakota Republican Secretary of State Michael Howe declined to comment, citing the pending litigation.
Republican state Sen. Kristin Roers said the lawsuit could have unintended consequences, such as for military voters, and would effectively penalize voters who live in areas with slow postal service.
“I don’t see that this is something that is a huge, glaring issue in our election system,” she said.
Richard L. Hasen, a University of California, Los Angeles law professor and election law expert, criticized the legal basis of the lawsuits. In the Mississippi case, he said the RNC appears to be trying to gain a political advantage because it “believes late-arriving mail ballots are more likely to favor Democrats.”
He noted that the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which includes Mississippi, has historically been quite conservative “and not protective of voting rights.”
“It would be a far reach for a challenge to Mississippi law to lead to a national injunction against this,” he said. “But it’s possible.”
___
Fernando reported from Chicago, Pettus from Jackson, Mississippi, and Dura from Bismarck, North Dakota.
___
The Associated Press receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about AP’s democracy initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Lots of dignitaries but no real fireworks — only electronic flash — as the Asian Games open
- Trudeau pledges Canada’s support for Ukraine and punishment for Russia
- 5 dead as train strikes SUV in Florida, sheriff says
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Historians race to find Great Lakes shipwrecks before quagga mussels destroy the sites
- World's greatest whistler? California competition aims to crown champ this weekend
- Ice pops cool down monkeys in Brazil at a Rio zoo during a rare winter heat wave
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Amazon plans to hire 250,000 employees nationwide. Here are the states with the most jobs.
Ranking
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Oklahoma judge arrested in Austin, Texas, accused of shooting parked cars, rear-ending another
- Three dead in targeted shooting across the street from Atlanta mall, police say
- John Wilson brags about his lifetime supply of Wite-Out
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- How Jessica Alba's Mexican Heritage Has Inspired Her Approach to Parenting
- Christina Hall and Tarek El Moussa Celebrate Daughter Taylor Becoming a Teenager
- White House creates office for gun violence prevention
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Mexico pledges to set up checkpoints to ‘dissuade’ migrants from hopping freight trains to US border
Farm Aid 2023: Lineup, schedule, how to watch livestream of festival with Willie Nelson, Neil Young
National Cathedral replaces windows honoring Confederacy with stained-glass homage to racial justice
What to watch: O Jolie night
Ophelia slams Mid-Atlantic with powerful rain and winds after making landfall in North Carolina
Uganda’s president says airstrikes killed ‘a lot’ of rebels with ties to Islamic State in Congo
Ukraine targets key Crimean city a day after striking the Russian navy headquarters