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McCAUGHEY: Counting ballots after Election Day only invites fraud

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29.03.2026

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McCAUGHEY: Counting ballots after Election Day only invites fraud 

At stake is a national treasure of civic virtue, long understood as the one day on which the whole electorate's votes get counted, and everyone knows the results

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Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in a case that hinges on the meaning of Election Day — and it’s got Democrats sweating.

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The case, Watson v. Republican National Committee (RNC), challenges a Mississippi law that allows mail-in ballots received long after Election Day to be counted.

McCAUGHEY: Counting ballots after Election Day only invites fraud  Back to video

It’s one of 14 states, including populous ones like California and New York, that allow a post-Election Day “grace period” (five business days in Mississippi but longer elsewhere) for ballots to be returned.

The RNC is challenging that law.

Taking a states’ rights stance, Mississippi’s defenders argue that deciding when ballots must arrive is a state’s decision. The U.S. Constitution reserves to state legislatures the authority to prescribe “the times, places, and manner of holding federal elections.”

True, but the Constitution empowers Congress to set the date.

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In 1824, Congress chose the Tuesday after the first Monday in November as Election Day, and it’s been the same ever since.

But in recent years, the meaning of Election Day has been eroded — its finality and certainty undermined by state laws that allow absentee ballots to be counted days later.

Decision could affect midterms

At stake is a national treasure of civic virtue, long understood as the one day on which the whole electorate’s votes get counted, and everyone knows the results.

The justices’ decision will have a national impact and could potentially affect November’s midterms.

New York’s law allows a ballot postmarked by Election Day to be counted as many as seven days later, and worse yet, it deems a ballot lacking a postmark to “be presumed to have been timely mailed or delivered.”

That’s crazy because it invites cheating.

And many, including House Speaker Mike Johnson, suspect that as ballots straggle in, fraudulent efforts to change the outcome could be afoot.

In California in 2024, “We had three House Republican candidates who were ahead on Election Day,”

Johnson observed last month. “And every time a new tranche of ballots came in, they just magically whittled away until their leads were lost.”

Public confidence in the honesty of elections matters and states should avoid any procedure that undermines it. For at least one of the justices weighing the Mississippi case, that will be a major concern.

In 2020, when the court was asked to intervene in a conflict between Pennsylvania’s highest court and its state legislature over a similar question, Justice Brett Kavanaugh said he favoured limiting ballot-counting to Election Day.

Doing so, he wrote, would “avoid the chaos and suspicions of impropriety that can ensue if thousands of absentee ballots flow in after election day and potentially flip the results of the election.”

The court refrained from intervening then, but Kavanaugh’s concern will likely influence the deliberations this time.

Close races can make an outsized difference

Much of the discussion, though, focused on the history and meaning of Election Day, which Mississippi’s defenders claimed merely means the day on which voters decide, not the day their votes are counted.

That’s historically implausible, but the three leftists on the bench — Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson — showed interest in that theory.

But everyone in the courtroom agreed that mail-in balloting is here to stay.

About 30% of the electorate voted by mail in the 2024 presidential election.

Only a sliver of those 24 million mailed ballots — about 725,000 in all — arrived late in states with grace periods and were counted.

It’s a small percentage, but as Johnson noted, in close races they can make an outsized difference.

Democrats argue that striking down the Mississippi grace period would throw the coming midterms into chaos.

But in fact, Ohio, Kansas, North Dakota and Utah eliminated their grace periods last year when the Mississippi lawsuit was filed.

These states expect the grace period to be struck down and they are on the mark.

Even if New York and other delayed-count states wait for the court to rule before acting, they’ll still have more than five months to alert their voters about the need to mail their ballots in early.

It’s hardly an insurmountable challenge.

And it’s something that’s already the law in 36 states.

A clear majority of states require ballots to arrive by Election Day to be counted and no one is protesting that that’s a massive disenfranchisement problem.

Getting to the mailbox with plenty of time to spare is a small price to pay for the privilege of living in a representative democracy.

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