The opinion redirects the case back to the lower court while refraining from issuing an injunction that would halt Mississippiās law.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit released an opinion on Oct. 25 stating that federal law requires mail-in ballots be counted no later than election day.
In doing so, it ruled against a Mississippi law allowing count ballots to be counted if they arrived no more than five days after the election and if they were postmarked on or before the date of the election.
The opinion, which came less than two weeks before the 2024 elections, redirects the case back to the lower court while refraining from issuing an injunction that would halt Mississippiās law.
The policy was adopted during the COVID-19 pandemic, but the state kept it after the pandemic ended.
āBecause Mississippiās statute allows ballot receipt up to five days after the federal election day, it is preempted by federal law,ā Judge Andrew Oldham, an appointee of former President Donald Trump, wrote in his opinion for the court.
RNC Chairman Michael Whatley celebrated the decision on the social media platform X, describing it as a āseismic win for fair, accurate, secure, and transparent elections.ā
Justifying the decision to throw the decision back to the lower court, rather than block Mississippiās law, Oldham referenced a Supreme Court precedent that cautions against last minute changes to election procedures.
āTodayās decision says nothing about remedies,ā he said. āWe decline to grant plaintiffsā initial request for a permanent injunction … Instead, we remand to the district court for further proceedings to fashion appropriate relief, giving due consideration to āthe value of preserving the status quo in a voting case on the eve of an election.’ā
He was quoting another fifth circuit case but also referenced the Supreme Courtās 2006 decision in Purcell v. Gonzalez.
āThat is so even if election officials do not receive those ballots until after election day,ā his brief to the court read. āAn election does not itself require ballot receipt.ā
Oldham and two other Trump appointees, Judge James Ho and Judge Kyle Duncan, heard oral arguments over the issue in September. The Republican National Committee (RNC) had appealed the decision of a lower court that ruled in favor of Mississippi.
Oldham reasoned that the Constitution granted Congress authority over elections through two provisions, including one that allows Congress to alter the timing of federal elections hosted by states.
Oldham drew a distinction between the timing of ballot counting and ballot casting.
āEven if the ballots have not been counted, the result is fixed when all of the ballots are received and the proverbial ballot box is closed,ā he wrote. āThe selections are done and final.ā
Mississippiās āproblem,ā he said, āis that it thinks a ballot can be ācastā before it is received.ā He added that ā[a] voterās selection of a candidate differs from the publicās election of the candidate.ā
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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