Supreme Court turns away RNC plea to disqualify Pennsylvania voters who mailed ballots with errors
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Friday turned down an appeal from the Republican National Committee and refused to disqualify Pennsylvania voters who had sent in a mail ballot with an error on the envelope.
There were no dissents.
The decision is a victory for voting rights advocates who fought the issue in Pennsylvania courts.
They said voters should not lose their right to vote because they made a minor error on the mailing envelope.
A decision in favor of the RNC could have affected several thousand voters across a state that is seen as pivotal in the presidential race between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump.
Last week, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court gave legally registered voters a second chance to cast a ballot.
By a 4-3 vote, the state justices ruled that voters who sent in a defective mail ballot could go to their polling place on election day and file a provisional ballot that would be counted.
Trump and the Pennsylvania Republicans were highly skeptical of voting by mail four years ago, contending it could lead to fraud.
The Supreme Court conservatives have also been skeptical of judges making last-minute changes in voting rules.
On Monday, the RNC filed an emergency appeal in the Supreme Court and argued that the state court had “dramatically changed the rules on mail voting…in the midst of the ongoing general election.”
They said Pennsylvania law did not “create a cure process for mail ballot errors.”
Their appeal asked the justices to either throw out the state court entirely or instead order the “segregation of affected provisional ballots” so they can be counted separately.
Election officials in Pennsylvania said the RNC claim is wrong. They told the court that many counties have offered provisional ballots to voters whose mail ballot was flawed. They said it would be dramatic change in the law to revoke that standard practice.
In its 4-3 decision, the state court said voters should not lose their right to vote because their mail ballot had an error on the envelope, such as a missing date or signature, or it was not mailed in a cover envelope.
The state judges agreed those defective ballots were “void” and could not be counted, but they said the voters should be permitted to cast a provisional vote in person.
“What honest voting principle is violated by recognizing the validity of one ballot cast by one voter,” said state Justice Christine Donohue for the majority.
The ACLU and other voting rights advocates defended that decision in response to the RNC’s appeal.
“The provisional voting process ensures that, for each voter, one ballot will be counted—not two ballots, and not zero ballots,” they argued.