The Supreme Court is considering whether to limit when mail-in ballots can be counted in states across the U.S. NPR's Michel Martin discusses with Amy Howe of SCOTUSblog.
The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing arguments on Monday to decide whether states can continue to count late-arriving mail ballots — an election issue targeted by President Donald Trump. All 50 states ...
Seventeen states currently count ballots arriving after Election Day, and two states count them for longer than two weeks ...
14don MSN
Supreme Court worried that counting late mail ballots could undermine concept of ‘Election Day’
The Supreme Court appeared uneasy on Monday with the implications of Mississippi’s late-arriving mail ballot law — and how ...
22hon MSN
State nears deadline to stop counting ballots with QR codes, raising special session, lawsuit risks
The deadline stems from a law passed two years ago that bans the machine-readable codes that are currently used to tally votes on ballots printed by Georgia’s Dominion ballot-marking devices. Critics, ...
The attorney general's office said the sheriff's investigation is baseless and meant to sow distrust in California's ...
Multiple conservatives were skeptical of a Mississippi law that allows ballots to be received up to five days late, as long ...
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