Threatening to Prosecute Your Opponents When They Give Up Power Is a Bad...
Trump Targets Car Affordability With Regulatory Reform
Democrats Want You and Your Kid Dead
Slàn (Goodbye) Ireland
Perspective From a Lonely Marker
Leftists Say the Strangest Things
The 'Five Megaphone' Emergency Plaguing Trump, His Administration, and The GOP
It is Not Affordable To Vote Democrat
Democratic Lawmakers Big Mad That Trump Admin Is Fighting Narco-Terrorists
Trump Admin Sweeping Minneapolis For Illegals After Somali Fraud Exposed
Maryland Man Sentenced for Scheme Helping Foreign IT Workers Pose as U.S. Citizens
Arizona Father-Son Duo Sentenced for Massive Cross-Border Narcotics and Money Laundering S...
Two Miami Men Get 57 Months for Nationwide Sale of Diverted HIV and...
Federal Jury Finds Texas Resident Guilty in $150K PEMEX Bribery Plot
Another Person Stabbed on Charlotte Light Rail; Illegal Alien Arrested
Tipsheet

BREAKING: Appellate Courts Makes a Big Decision on a Swing State's Mail-In Ballots

AP Photo/Lynne Sladky

On Tuesday, a federal court of appeals upheld a six-day extension for officials in Wisconsin to county ballots for the presidential election. The ruling means ballots that are postmarked on or before Nov 3. can be counted up until Nov. 9. The decision is considered to be a win for Democrats, although Republicans are likely to appeal the decision to the United States Supreme Court.

Advertisement

Two days ago the appellate court paused the lower court's decision to uphold the extension. Eventually, the three judge panel – all appointed by Republican presidents – that the ruling was good.

According to the Associated Press, the ruling doesn't change anything for the Wisconsin Republican Party or the Republican National Committee.

“Neither group contends that the new deadlines established by the district court would violate the constitutional rights of any of their members,” the appeals court ruling stated. “The political organizations themselves do not suffer any injury caused by the judgment.”

The extension was granted after the Democratic National Committee, the Wisconsin Democratic Party and the League of Women Voters sued. They made the argument that long lines, fewer polling locations and election workers in combination with thousands of ballots being mailed back made it difficult for people to vote. Republicans, however, argued that there's been enough time for people to request ballots, fill them out and return them before Election Day.

Advertisement

Related:

WISCONSIN

Wisconsin State election officials anticipate roughly two million people voting by mail this November. As of this writing, roughly 1.2 million absentee ballots had been requested. More than 308,000 have been returned. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement