As we make our way to the polls, either in-person or via mail, we need to remember that in addition to sending elected officials to Washington, D.C., we are voting for governors, state legislators, mayors and, in some states, judges. We don’t talk about it nearly often enough, but our votes in these races are just as important as the ones we cast in the presidential race. The Supreme Court’s decision Monday night in a case involving Wisconsin’s election drives home the importance of these down-ballot races, especially those for state legislative seats.
Biden: “I’m gonna go vote. There’s a lot of people on that ballot – not just me but the downballot as well – that are gonna change things for us, make it better.”
— Andrew Solender (@AndrewSolender) October 28, 2020
Voters should make sure that the people they elect to their state legislatures will protect their right to vote. This Supreme Court will not, and it has become far less likely to permit the lower federal courts to do so, either.
The court, especially following the confirmation of its newest justice, Amy Coney Barrett, seems increasingly likely to defer to state legislatures decisions regarding what protections their state constitutions provide — or don’t — to voters, even in the middle of a crisis like the current pandemic.
In Wisconsin, the issue involved extending the period for mail-in ballots to be received past Election Day. With more people relying on mail-in ballots given the risks of in-person voting, Wisconsin residents, like so many U.S. voters, worried their absentee ballots wouldn’t be counted if they voted by mail because of Covid-19-related delays in both the delivery and processing of their ballots. So, Democrats asked a federal judge to permit ballots to be counted as long as they were postmarked by Nov. 3 and received within the following six days.
The judge authorized the extension, but the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the district court’s decision, ruling that ballots had to be received by Election Day in order to count. Democrats petitioned the Supreme Court to hear the case. Although the Supreme Court declined to take the case, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Neil Gorsuch, and Brett Kavanaugh each wrote to explain why they would permit the decision that ballots must be received by Election Day to stand. Justice Elena Kagan dissented, joined by Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor, to explain that the Constitution required the federal courts to step in and protect the rights of voters during the pandemic.
Voters should make sure that the people they elect to their state legislatures will protect their right to vote. This Supreme Court will not, and it has become far less likely to permit the lower federal courts to do so, either.
According to Kagan’s dissent, with the pandemic worsening in Wisconsin, about half of the state’s voters had applied for mail-in ballots and more were expected to do so before the Oct. 29 deadline. The district judge found that the surge in demand and “unusual postal delays” meant many voters who fully complied with the rules wouldn’t receive their ballots in the mail by Election Day, let alone in time to return them. As Kagan pointed out, this meant as many as 100,000 votes would not count without additional time.
The conservative justices were willing to set aside the exigencies of the pandemic to avoid, in the words of Roberts, “federal intrusion on state lawmaking processes.” Kavanaugh noted that “it is one thing for state legislatures to alter their own election rules in the late innings and to bear the responsibility for any unintended consequences. It is quite another thing for a federal district court to swoop in and alter carefully considered and democratically enacted state election rules when an election is imminent.”









