Photo illustration of the U.S. Supreme Court building with mail-in ballots, representing the challenge to post-Election Day ballot counting.
Photo illustration of the U.S. Supreme Court building with mail-in ballots, representing the challenge to post-Election Day ballot counting.
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Supreme Court agrees to hear challenge to post–Election Day mail ballot counting

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The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday, Nov. 10, it will hear a Mississippi case testing whether states may count mail ballots postmarked by Election Day but delivered soon after. The suit, led by the Republican National Committee, targets Mississippi’s five‑business‑day grace period and could affect practices in 16 states plus several U.S. territories, according to NPR.

The justices granted review in Watson v. Republican National Committee, an appeal brought by Mississippi’s top election official after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled that federal law bars counting ballots received after Election Day. The petition was filed in early June and docketed June 10, 2025, according to the Supreme Court’s docket.

At issue is Mississippi’s rule allowing mail‑in absentee ballots postmarked on or before Election Day to be counted if they arrive within five business days. The RNC and other plaintiffs argue that federal statutes establishing a uniform federal Election Day—2 U.S.C. § 7 and § 1 for House and Senate races, and 3 U.S.C. § 1 for presidential electors—require ballots to be both cast and received by that day.

A Fifth Circuit panel sided with the RNC on Oct. 25, 2024, in an opinion by Judge Andrew S. Oldham. The court reversed a district judge who had upheld Mississippi’s law but did not immediately alter procedures for the 2024 election. In March 2025, the Fifth Circuit denied rehearing en banc. Judge James E. Graves Jr. dissented, writing that “federal law does not mandate that ballots be received by state officials before Election Day’s conclusion,” citing dictionary definitions, case law, and legislative history.

How many places could be affected? NPR reports that 16 states plus Washington, D.C., Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands currently count mail ballots received after Election Day if they are timely postmarked, while many more extend similar grace periods to military and overseas voters. Supporters say these windows account for postal delays, weather, and other disruptions.

The policy stakes are sizable in high‑mail‑voting states. Washington’s secretary of state has said that more than 250,000 ballots postmarked on time arrived after Election Day in the state’s 2024 general election.

Republicans have pressed to curtail such grace periods. The RNC filed multiple challenges ahead of the 2024 election, including in Nevada. In March 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the Justice Department to push states to count only ballots received by Election Day and to tie certain federal support to compliance; courts have since blocked or paused key parts of that order while litigation proceeds.

Several GOP‑led legislatures have also tightened deadlines. In Utah, lawmakers eliminated the state’s post‑Election Day grace period this year, shifting to a received‑by‑Election‑Day rule.

NPR notes this is the Court’s third voting‑related case this term, alongside a dispute over whether candidates have standing to bring certain mail‑ballot suits and a separate challenge under the Voting Rights Act.

Mississippi, defending its law, argues that its system requires ballots to be cast by Election Day and merely permits election officials to receive and count timely postmarked ballots shortly thereafter—an approach the state says is lawful and mirrors practices in a number of jurisdictions.

What comes next: A ruling expected by mid‑2026 could clarify whether states may count timely postmarked ballots that arrive after Election Day or whether federal law imposes a received‑by‑Election‑Day deadline for federal races.

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Reactions on X to the Supreme Court's agreement to hear the Republican-led challenge to Mississippi's mail ballot grace period are predominantly neutral news shares from journalists and outlets like The New York Times and Reuters. Conservative users and accounts express support for the case, viewing it as a step toward enhancing election integrity and tightening voting rules ahead of 2026 midterms. Critics, including some regular users, express concern that the decision could restrict voting access and undermine democracy, potentially leading to chaos in multiple states.

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U.S. Supreme Court building with symbolic mail ballots, illustrating the case on post-Election Day ballot counting.
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Supreme Court to hear case on counting mail ballots that arrive after Election Day

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The U.S. Supreme Court on Nov. 10 agreed to decide whether federal election-day statutes bar states from counting mail ballots received after Election Day if they were postmarked by that day, a dispute from Mississippi that could affect rules in more than a dozen states ahead of the 2026 midterms.

The US Supreme Court heard oral arguments on March 23 in Watson v. Republican National Committee, weighing whether states can count mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day but received later. The case challenges a Mississippi law allowing a five-day grace period, with similar rules in over 30 states. Conservative justices expressed concerns over fraud risks, while liberals defended state authority.

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The US Supreme Court will hear arguments on Monday in Watson v. Republican National Committee, a case challenging state laws that count mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day but received shortly after. The Republican National Committee argues that federal law requires states to discard such ballots, a stance that could have invalidated over 750,000 votes in the 2024 election. About half of states, including Texas and Mississippi, currently allow these ballots.

A federal judge has ordered special elections for the Mississippi Supreme Court after ruling that the state's electoral map violates voting rights. The decision stems from a lawsuit claiming the map dilutes Black voters' influence. New elections could occur as early as November 2026.

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Democratic state attorneys general have stepped up legal and political efforts ahead of the 2026 midterm elections as President Donald Trump promotes federal changes to election rules, including a House-passed bill tied to proof of citizenship. A Heritage Action-commissioned poll reported majority support for those requirements in five states.

On November 18, 2025, a three-judge federal panel in El Paso blocked Texas from using its newly redrawn U.S. House map in the 2026 midterms, finding the plan was likely a racial gerrymander and directing the state to revert to its 2021 districts while appeals proceed.

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The U.S. Supreme Court has denied a Republican challenge, allowing California to proceed with its Democrat-favored redistricting map for the 2026 midterm elections. The decision permits the state to use a map approved by voters last year as a counter to similar efforts in Texas. This ruling maintains the status quo amid ongoing national battles over partisan map-drawing.

 

 

 

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