What Happened?

Yesterday, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states may continue counting mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day as long as those ballots were cast in accordance with state law, such as being postmarked by Election Day. The 5-4 decision came in Watson v. Republican National Committee, a case challenging Mississippi’s law permitting absentee ballots to be received up to five business days after Election Day if they were mailed on time.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote the majority opinion, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and the Court’s three liberal justices. The majority concluded that federal law establishes Election Day as the deadline by which voters must cast their ballots, but it does not require election officials to receive every ballot by that same day.

Why It Matters

The ruling preserves similar laws in thirty states and prevents major changes to voting procedures just months before the 2026 congressional midterm elections. Millions of Americans, including military personnel stationed overseas, rural voters, elderly citizens, people with disabilities, and others who rely on absentee voting, could be affected by whether delayed mail delivery invalidates otherwise timely ballots. Election officials and voting-rights advocates argued that voters should not lose their right to vote simply because of postal delays beyond their control…

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The ruling leaves these existing state laws intact while avoiding widespread changes immediately before a national election. The Republican National Committee and President Donald Trump supported the legal challenge, arguing that stricter ballot deadlines would strengthen election integrity. Following the decision, President Trump renewed calls for Congress to pass additional election legislation that would impose nationwide voting restrictions, while Democratic leaders and voting-rights organizations praised the ruling as protecting lawful voters from disenfranchisement.

States that already accept ballots arriving after Election Day will continue using their existing procedures, while states requiring ballots to be received by Election Day are unaffected. The decision itself does not expand mail voting nationwide or require any state to change its laws. Instead, it confirms that states have flexibility to determine whether ballots mailed by Election Day may be counted if they arrive later.

How it Affects You

In close congressional races, particularly in states with large numbers of absentee voters, official results could take several additional days to finalize as election officials verify and count eligible late-arriving ballots. While that may delay final vote totals in some contests, the Court emphasized that counting legally cast ballots is consistent with federal election law and longstanding state election practices.

Delayed vote counts could lead to the spread of unfounded allegations of fraud or suspicious activity. During the rush to declare winners and losers as quickly as possible, political factions whose claims turn out to be wrong could give birth to conspiracy theories and further erode public trust in the election process.

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