We will hear argument this morning in case 24, 1260 Watson versus Republican ...
Mr. Stewart.
“>> Mr. Chief Justice, may it please the court.”
States have broad power over elections.
Throughout our history, they've used that power to change how they hold elections. Know where is that change more apparent than in election day itself. Congress set the federal election day in 1845. At the time, everyone voted in person. There was no absentee voting.
There was no secret ballot. Voters challenged each other's qualifications at the polls on election day. And states received ballots on election day. Over time, states changed all those practices. They did so as Congress extended election day to all federal offices.
They've done so ever since. No one claims that in setting the federal election day,
Congress blocked most of those changes.
The dispute is whether Congress blocked just one change, allowing ballots cast by election day to be received after that day. States have allowed that for over a century. Congress has respected it. No one challenged it until now.
The question is whether Congress in 1845 blocked that practice. The answer is no. The election day statutes adopt a simple rule. States must make a final choice of officers by election day. That is the plain meaning of an election.
As this court said, in the United States versus classic, from time immemorial, an election to public office has been in point of substance,
no more, and no less than the expression by qualified electors of their choice of candidates.
Mississippi satisfies that rule. It makes a choice on election day. And only that rule respects the last 180 years of state law making. The election day must be what it was in 1845. That takes out much more than the ballot receipt laws of 30 states today.
It dooms absentee voting, modern methods of voting, the secret ballot, and more. Congress did not adopt that destabilizing view when it simply set the election day. The fifth circuit was wrong to rule otherwise. This court should reverse.
I welcome the court's questions. Just to be clear, you have said in your opening statement. Sometimes you said the choice has to be made by election day.
“And at other points, you say, on election day, which is it?”
I think the statewide choice needs to be made by elector or on election day itself when the entire electorate has voted. Justice Thomas, I think voters themselves need to make their individual selections by election day. If I give my ballot mail in ballot to my neighbor, is that a choice? It's a choice.
It's not a final choice that can be recognized in the context of an election. So when do I know whether or not a choice it's final? When you've submitted to the state to the appropriate state election official through the designated state process. So why isn't it the rule then that the final with the formalized decision, electoral decision, is it made until that's done?
Until it's submitted to the official year on, I think the choice is made once the voter has made. The voters as a whole have made an irrevocable decision. What that means? A final choice, they've made a final choice when I handed it to my neighbor. But it's a final choice within an official state process, Justice Thomas.
Well, I think the ballot is an official state process. Is that enough? Not enough to be known in a public way to the state. That happens when it is parted with and submitted through mail to the appropriate election official. Then it's final.
If day means includes a period after a particular day of the election. Does it include a particular day before the day of the election? Or does your logic require a different consideration?
“I mean, I may not be understanding the question correctly or honor, but I think the key is that the election day is the day by which a final choice,”
the electorate, why it must be made, it can't be made after that day by voters or the electorate as a whole. But individual selections can surely be made before that day because there's still no final choice until you have an electorate, why deadline? Is there any limit to that? Is it how early people could vote? You know, drop it off two weeks before.
As far as the federal election day statute are concerned, I don't think there is a limit to early that could occur. I think you just need the day when the electorate as a whole needs to have chosen. There might be other practical or other barriers in that, of course, elections are very long process to begin with the entire electoral process. Of surely things are happening weeks and months before. But I think even a couple weeks before, even earlier than that in some cases, people are making individual selections.
It's just election day itself is the day for the final collective choice.
Council, I want to go back to your answers to Justice Thomas. So I understand that Mississippi's particular rule says that it has to be deposited in USPS or with a common carrier. But I don't understand why Mississippi's definition in the next case would preclude a state from adopting a law along the lines of the one that Justice Thomas is proposing. For example, if I have someone in my neighborhood, in my HOA who says, "Listen, I'm going to take everybody's votes." And what if the state said, "That's fine. If you've cast your final vote, and you've designated someone to carry your vote."
To, as long as it gets to the ballot box, five days after election day, it's fine.
“Why does your definition preclude what Justice Thomas hypothesized?”
Right, and I think Justice Barrett, the answer is that submission to mail or commentary is different in kind than say submitting it to a relative or sort of a neighbor.
What's the difference? They're not government officials. They are impartial third parties that have a duty to deliver what they're owed without altering it. What about the definition that you're proposing preclude that? Your definition didn't say, "Final as submitted to an impartial third party or final as submitted to a common carrier." You said, "The final choice has been made."
There are lots of different ways, seems to me, that you can make a final choice, and you also have the problem of this revocability from the postal service regulation. So, I think, to start with the first part, you're on. I mean, I think we're going at a historically recognized form of finality. I think history is helpful in a number of ways, and one way, as long as we've had mail in voting, we've, for almost as long as that time, we've had post-election in a ballot receipt. I mean, mail in voting, I think in general, has been understood as a permissible unchallenged method.
I wouldn't rely on the history of how we're used since you're telling us not to rely on the other side's history,
like just because it's always been done that way, doesn't mean it has to be done that way,
which I actually find, it's a good point in your favor, but then it seems to me that you're flipping back around and saying,
“"Well, absentee voting has always been done that way by common carrier, and so that's how we would expect it to be done."”
I think it says something that, for a hundred years, we've had people voting by mail, and that's been an understood means of submitting a ballot to the state. I think what it embodies Justice Barrett is there's an intuition that when you send, when you put something through the postal service, it's final, it's trusted, it's not like giving it to kind of a non-facial third party. What if a state came up with a law that said, "Soulong is a notary?" That's official, that's recognized, certified that you cast your ballot on election day, and it was delivered later by whatever means, common carrier or not.
What in your theory of the preemptive effect of this statute would preclude that law?
I think, two points on that justice course, one I think is that-- Pick you best. Well, I think one's point in our favor, and one's point against our friends, which is that there's a finality of submitting it to an official. Yeah, it's been notarized by, well, how about a Justice of the United States Supreme Court? Is that official enough for you? I mean, it's pretty official, I don't think it's been pretty official. It's pretty official. It's pretty good, you're on it, but I don't think it kind of hits submission to the state.
“Ah, okay, well, that's what I wanted to explore. So that's not submitted to the state, even if it's notarized.”
And half a day, but it was final on the day of, and somebody brings it into the state offices a week or three months later. That doesn't count, but if it goes into the mail, it does. What in the statute? What words in the statute would you have us read that into that rule into? Well, I mean, I think-- Just to make sure I understand-- I think that's fine under my friends view two, you're on it. I mean, I know where you could be.
I'm asking about you, Council. Sure. So I think-- You're saying that's not fine, and I want to understand what-- what most federal law preempts that? Well, I think, number one, I just am not-- at least as I'm understanding the hypothetical, it doesn't appear to be submission to the state, you're on it. Oh, it gets submitted to the state three weeks later, just not by common carrier. Well, I mean, if what you're saying your honor is that a-- that a notary has been deemed a sufficient ballot receiver under state law, then I think--
Yes. Then that's okay, too. Okay, what if state laws-- so now you're saying that is okay? I think it may depend on how, you know, what the level of officiality of the state says it's official by God, when a Supreme Court justice or perhaps just a notary says it's official. That's good enough, under your-- it has to be, I think.
And if that's okay, why can't a state say, how about a timestamp video showing that I voted on election day?
Here I am filling up my ballot, and then my brother or maybe a some aggregato...
And that's got to be okay, too, doesn't it?
“I think it's still just-- I-- I keep coming back just to this pedigree of submitting it to a state.”
I mean, I think as a good-- Well, the state says that's official. It says that's fine, ballot aggregators are great, and so long as it's a timestamp video or a notary or maybe a Supreme Court, who knows what the library says you cast it on the day of the election. We're good to go, right?
I mean, I do still have some concern that it has not been-- Council, why are you finding the premise? In the Civil War, at least two states permitted military officers who weren't sworn state officials. They were federal officials, but not sworn state officials, to accept the ballots and transmitted by mail to the state, okay?
And that was in the Civil War, all right?
Since 1918, we've had laws like Mississippi by 1944, eight of them, by since then, 12 more by 1886. And now half the states permit absentee ballots that are dropped in the mail, correct? No different than in the Civil War. We have no federal law that says that's not okay.
But the state to designate someone by whom an official ballot has to be given by election day. Correct? And if the state wants to make it a notary republic, if it wants to make it a military officer, if it wants to make it a Supreme Court justice,
if it wants to make it anyone, as long as it's done by election day, that's what counts. Correct? I mean, I think that's possible. We're not quite asking for that, you're on our really dumbest. No, you don't, because you're only defending this law.
And this law is very consistent with what happened in the Civil War. It's very consistent what has happened for over a hundred years. There's nothing in federal law that has prohibited it explicitly, correct? That's right, you're on. All right, that's just a certain way or it's asking you what I think she intends to be a friendly question,
but maybe you want to think about whether you want to go that far. What if the state designates in an official of the Republican Party, or the Democratic Party, who receives these ballots, collects ballots, and fills out an affidavit saying I received all these, and I will faithfully deliver them with that be okay?
Well, I think it's, I think it's actually okay under my friends. We're not, we're not making that ask, I mean, as far as my friends you are concerned, so long as somebody's designated a ballot receiver, they can be fine. Party boss, party bag man, relative, any of those so long as the state says you are a ballot receiver, that's fine.
“The only thing that apparently is not fine is US Postal Service Common Carrier.”
And I think that is, I think, very odd way to read those. Well, the Postal Service is not part of the state, and the Common Carrier isn't part of any government. It's, that's right, you're on it, but I mean, certainly, we all know the status of the US Postal Service is a highly regulated government entity with certain obligations. Common carriers in a very similar way, highly regulated with similar obligations.
And they give, in both cases, they're imbued with a duty to deliver what they received. And in fact, a duty that's, I think a good example is the fact that the IRS accepts tax return, which are obviously highly consequential documents with key time-menace requirements. The IRS accepts tax returns both through the mail and through Common Carrier. Well, you will accept ballots that are received within five days after election day,
that what is, you know, that whatever, the date that's set as election day, right? That's right. You have a variety of line drawing problems. So, we've been exploring one to whom and by what means is this thing to be the ballot to be delivered to the state. But what about the length of time that a state could choose?
Is it the case, isn't it the case that some state allows? Well, we'll count ballots that are received 21 days after election day. There are a couple that at the outlier, it's kind of canvassing and it can go that far. I think more common is that, is that okay? As far as, as far as the federal elections, the state statutes are concerned, yes, sir.
And I think this actually gets to a good point that loops back to something just as course. It was mentioned was, was getting in a certain way, which I think he was saying, what in the federal election day statutes decides that?
“I think that's the key point in our favor.”
This is an area where states get to go first to make these decisions Congress can step in.
So there's no limit. Except I suppose the day when presidential electors have to be appointed or the day when the next Congress begins.
It starts at session.
That's the only limit on counting on counting mail and ballots.
Those are some of the limits, you're on it. But I'd also say the federal election day statutes don't require states to count ballots at all. It doesn't speak to counting period. So I mean, if a state really didn't want that counting, but being delivered. So I do think it is a consequence.
And you can tell me if I'm wrong, but just so we can wrap this up. That by any means and by any date, up until the next Congress meets, a state can receive ballots. I think for congressional races potentially, yes, you're on. I think there are other title three kind of things that push action earlier in the presidential context. But again, I mean, there's nothing.
The key questions, these are three one sentence provisions and we want to be, I think, very careful not to read them for more than they were.
I was just going to say, isn't your point that the line drawing issues that have been raised are only problems to be extent?
The Congress thought they were problems. We're in a preemption dynamic.
“And so the question, I think, really is what did Congress intend with its statement about election day?”
Did it mean to cab in the states so that they did not have the discretion to make these kinds of decisions? And in addition to what Justice Sotomayor has said, which is, we have no federal statute that precludes this. I think we have several federal statutes that suggest that Congress was aware of post election day ballot deadlines that the state had enacted. And in fact, incorporated those in several circumstances. You speak to that. I'm talking about you, a cab of, for example, and some other federal statutes that indicate that Congress not only knew this was going on,
but then it interpreted and incorporated the state's own post election day ballot deadlines into federal law. Sure, you're honest. I think that's exactly right. So you, a cab is maybe the best example where Congress was told that about a dozen or so states have post election day ballot receipt laws. It respected those explicitly as to a deadline for ballots in, in that law.
I think the United States has agreed with us on that. And Congress wasn't worried. I think about the state's picking dates that were, you know, we might think or too long or whatnot. That was not in the statute. Congress just said whatever the state has decided with regard to ballot receipt deadlines is going to apply here.
Correct?
“In the case for 180 years, you're on her. And I think one feature that I, you know, obviously we're searching for what of the statutes mean at the time.”
But I think it's very hard for my friends to explain the past 100 years of history. And this law making the Soldier Voting Act in the 1940s was another example where Congress recognized and respected state deadlines. And it just gets very hard to explain those things. If you don't adopt the view that the federal election day statutes just do not set a ballot receipt deadline. Well, I want to ask you about the recall problem.
And before I get to that, throughout your brief, you say that the federal statute does require voters to submit their ballots to election officials on election day. Must be cast by election day. And that the election day is the day to conclude and concentrate the election through a final selection. You agree with all those statements, you're brief? Yes.
But at the same time, you say, actually, it doesn't have to be submitted to an election official. It just has to be submitted to a common carrier here.
And there's a contradiction there that I just want you to first address and then I'll give you my hypothetical.
Very good, Your Honor.
“I think when you put something in the mail, you're not, I think.”
That's not an election official, FedEx is an election official. But the recipient certainly is the person who you're submitting, submitting it in the mail too. That is the course. And right, Your Honor. You submit it to FedEx and they deliver it to the election official.
But you say it has to be submitted to an election official throughout your brief. But then you say a common carrier is okay. And those two things don't add up. Well, I think the difference is sending it to your brother versus sending it to the registrar. Oh, we already dealt with that.
The brother turns out to be okay, so long as the state says so. I think that's okay on there for you, Your Honor. I also want more here tonight. I think you already answered that one. So here's the hypothetical.
Let's say you have a state where a large portion of the electorate mails in their ballots on or close to election day. Not far fetched. Many states are like that. Then the day after the election,
a story breaks that one of the lead candidates engaged in an inappropriate sexual escapade, or perhaps is concluding with a foreign power. Again, not far fetched, I think. And the competing candidate immediately goes on the airwaves, and urges voters to recall their ballots.
To tell the common carriers not to deliver them,
and many common carriers will do that with anything that you've sent through them. FedEx, you just call them up and say I want to back.
“In that hypothetical, did the election happen on election day?”
Oh, by the way, it swings the election. So the election did happen on election day, Justice Gorsuch. As we've explained, our ballot does not allow using mail recall anything like that, when somebody submits their ballot.
First deal with my hypothetical, and then I'll deal with your statute.
Okay, the election happened on election day. Even though it changes the outcome. I mean, I think. Yes, it has to be your answer, doesn't it? Yes, sir, and I'm just, I want to figure about the.
All right. We're not agreeing that the outcome can be properly changed in that circumstance. Well, hold on. It did in my circumstances in my hypothetical. You can't change my hypothetical counsel.
And I'm just saying it's unlawful, your honor. I don't know what's wrong with that. I'm just saying that it's an unlawful circumstance, because we don't allow that ballot.
Oh, in Mississippi, okay.
“But that hypothetical could happen in another state, right?”
I think if the state is not providing that on mailing, there's a final choice made. I think that would be a problem with that law under the statute. Now, you say your statute, your, your, your different. You could admit my hypothetical could happen,
but you say it can't happen in Mississippi because recalls not allowed. I couldn't find that anywhere in Mississippi law. In fact, what I did see was a statute that says that you, that the Secretary of State can promulgate rules and regulations. That's 23, 15, 6, 37, 3.
And then I went, looked at the regulations. And rule 2.1 says that an absentee ballot is the final vote of a voter when the ballot is marked accepted. That doesn't preclude recall. And in fact, that allows recall.
I don't, I respectfully don't agree with that, crowner. I mean, what, what does it say recalls not permitted? I couldn't find that anywhere in your statutes or the rule. And I think by providing the ballots or final in cast under our state. No, it doesn't. It says, they're, they're final when marked accepted.
That's the regulation, you know. Yeah, and it, and it's your regulation. And it allows recall. It does, I, respectfully, it does not allow recall, you're honored. So you are, would you read to me the provision that precludes it?
It's, it's subsection 3 of the statute that my friends have. I read you said subsection 3 that says the Secretary of State can make rules. And then I read you the rule. To ensure that the ballots are final in cast. The, the, the, the, the, the rules.
That's our final in cast. It says, the, you know, votes promulgated by an absentee ballot that the absentee ballot. Persons absentee vote is final. You can make rules about when they're final. And what the rule says is is final when marked accepted.
And that's, I mean, it's speaking to a processing rule about what to do when somebody's, you know, when somebody's ballot potentially doesn't arrive on time. They submit an affidavit ballot. But I would come back to the, the text of the statute you're on. I mean, final, when cast is, is what?
Mr. Stewart, I'm, I just want to ask a clarifying point to this. Is it possible for a portion of Mississippi statute to be unlawful, not just go with me here? A portion of Mississippi statute to be unlawful insofar as a potentially permits recall. But still that, you know, would not address whether Mississippi statute was unlawful. Insofar as it allowed the ballot receipt after election day.
Yes, right. I mean, I think one possibility would be like, hey, look,
“you need more unambiguous finality here and you need to foreclose recall period full stop.”
Okay. And, and on this question, I just want to make sure I understand what you're saying. When you said yes, my friends on the other side say it's okay for private parties to deliver just like you do. Are you saying that that's just a manner of receipt. And whether you're, whether the ballot is received before after the election on all sides, everybody agrees that absentee ballots can be turned in by having, you know, the neighbor, the party operative or whatever,
scoop them up and bring them to the ballot box.
You're on our, I mean, maybe, you know, I'm not sure if I answered the earlier thing as Chris basically could.
I'm not comfortable with the neighbor piece. I do have serious concerns about that. But is that tied to the ballot receipt problem or is that just tied to, hey, maybe this is an unlawful way of executing absentee validating, regardless of when the ballots make it to the official.
I think it's the finality of the choice that has to be done by election day. And my concern is that if you're not sending it by mail, come and carry it. You're getting caught up counsel again. Could you go back to the question? Just as bad as not arguing with you.
She's saying, and what you said earlier is, and you believe that under your adversary, the opposing counsel's theory, you can give it to the RNC operative. You can give it to anybody. And so long as it's received on election day by the state, that's okay.
That's what you're saying, you're opposing counsel saying, and you saying,
the only question before us is if they can designate an appropriate vehicle to transmit the votes, then that's okay.
“I think I was saying the latter part, yes, you're on it.”
I actually think, under my friend's view, it's okay if the state can deem the ballot, deem received when the party operative himself or herself receives it. Because all that person has to do is be a ballot receiver designated by the state. Right, and we're trying to queue more closely, not just to detect, but also the historical 100 year long you can submit it by mail.
Okay.
So, but the bottom line is that states can choose when the final vote has to be counted.
States have discretion over counting. Exactly. Thank you, Council. Justice Thomas, anything further? Just as a point of clarification, without looking at the subsequent history,
what do you think the federal law required as far as the election day? That the voters make a final choice by that day. The way I boil it down, Justice Thomas, this choice is critical and unchanging. Method of making that choice is malleable,
and that does also explain all the subsequent history. And you don't have to formalize that choice. You do by submitting, by parting with your ballot and submitting it to the state. Have we had any examples? Your position does require some difficult line drawing problems,
and maybe that's inevitable. But one is the degree of confidence that one must have in the entity or person who transmits the ballot to the state. We've talked about that. One is how long after the election day votes must be,
votes can be received.
A third is whether it has to be postmarked.
“Aren't there eight states that do not require a postmark for late ballots?”
There are a number of states that don't require that, Your Honor. I think postmarking is a good evidence that something has been timely submitted. I think if somebody were challenging a law like that, it would potentially be a very different kind of challenge. They'd have to make sort of factual showings to challenge that ballots
were not cast by election day, but surely not this case. Maybe it's inevitable that some sort of line drawing decisions like these have to be made unless the rule is anything goes. States can do anything they want in this area. We don't have a whole lot to go on here.
We have the phrase election day and we have history. If we look to just at the phrase election day, what would we take from that? I think you've been saying, we're moving in this direction. We don't have election day anymore. We have election month or we have election months.
I mean, the early voting can start a month before the election. The ballots can be received a month after the election.
“Well, I think the best way to read your Honor is that by setting election day,”
the Congress set the final choice day.
And that's the key thing.
Final choice day, what Congress was concerned about at the time, was some states making final choices, say, a month before other states were making final choices. And the distortions, the fraud, the risks that that had. When everybody's making a final choice on the same day, even if some individual choices are made before then, you're honoring the statutes.
And I think, you know, I think just a little, you made this observation. You're not allowed to go on because the statutes are just not very, there's not a lot of pro-lixity there. I think that's a point in favor of difference to the states. You know, if Congress has not spoken to something,
especially in this context where states are expressly empowered to regulate these things, that's a big point in favor of letting states continue to do so as they have for a century. >> Do you think it's a legitimate for us to take into account Congress's desire, Congress's passage of the election day statutes for the purpose of combating fraud or the appearance of fraud? And will, and some of the briefs have argued that confidence in election outcomes can be seriously undermined.
If the apparent outcome of the election on the day after the polls close is radically flipped by the acceptance later of a big stash of ballots that flipped the election or, you know, I think you got ballots that are delivered by somebody by, you know,
By a neighbor, and they received the month after the election, and they don't...
>> I think the best way to do it is to honor the statutes purpose,
but doing so by respecting the statutes text and animating context. And what these statutes were getting at was not just any kind of fraud writ large in all elections, which, you know, no statute could do, but a situation where, okay, you know,
“state one votes, you know, has their election on one day and is it in state two neighboring has its election three weeks later?”
Because the concern would be, let's say state one goes for one party and then state three goes for the other party with a huge turnout for that other party. You could have potential fraud. People went across state lines and voted, or you could have the appearance of that sort of fraud, even if it didn't actually happen. Like people just said, oh my gosh, they voted for that person, I'm, you know, big turnout. So I think that's the kind of thing that animated those statutes,
where is fraud writ large was not, was not a good example. I do think it's, it's notable that my, my friends with the United States, you know, you know, obviously they, they've, they've sounded the anti fraud theme.
They haven't cited a single example of fraud from post election, maybe I'll receive.
Okay, Shree. Thank you, I'll let my colleagues have. Just a sort of error. Has there been any history of voter recall in the males in an Mississippi? You say the law doesn't permit it, but has there been any history of it?
None that I've ever heard of your, I mean, this isn't something that was raised until the appellate reply breaks and nobody cited a single example in history of it. All right, and I understand just this, um, elite OS questions about the policy questions of what will create discomfort or not.
“But the constitution, thus the issue of elections in the States, unless superseded by Congress, correct?”
That's right, you're on it.
So if there is a policy question to be had, the entities to decide that are the states and
Congress, not the courts, correct? That's right, you're on it. And absent a law, in federal law, um, that suggests that absentee ballots must be received by a certain time. There's no explicit requirement of that, correct? Right, you're on it, or even implicit.
And the implicit, we have the military acts that since World War II, at least, and the civil war, I should go back that far, have permitted absentee ballots to be received long past election day, correct? We have a very long history of that, you're on it. Exactly.
Um, so the people who should decide this issue are not the courts, but Congress, correct? Right, you're on it. I think the states and Congress. That's right, you're on it.
“And as I was mentioning in my colleague, we, with I believe Justice Lito earlier,”
that's kind of the structure of our system. States go first. If Congress doesn't like it, it overrides. And as I think Justice Lito said for the court in Arizona in a tribal, we respect what Congress said as far as it went, but no farther.
And that's kind of the history of voting in election law in the country. History is informative of what's been permitted by Congress, because what we're looking for is what understanding Congress had with respect to elections, correct? That's right, you're on it. All right, and it doesn't talk about the receipt of absentee ballots after elections at all.
So we look to the history of where Congress has accepted it, correct? I think that does help here. All right, but the attempt by some of the Amika here to broom nines this inquiry, and say that history tells us how elections must be held and on what date and when receipt can happen or not happen, why is that not an acceptable way to look at this?
Well, I think the difference between Bruin and here, your honor, is that Bruin and Bruin, the court, the question issue, you know, whether a restriction on firearms is consistent with our historical tradition of firearm regulation, there's a rich history addressing precisely that issue, sometimes through analogy, but very much, I mean, Bruin itself, I believe, I want to say 40 pages of history, just analyzing those things.
We don't have anything like that of a rich history, suggesting that Congress was even thinking about locking an election a ballot receipt or anything like it. It was addressing different things. Thank you, Council. Thank you, Your Honor.
Mr. Stagan. I guess Mr. Stagan, your answer is to just the sum of your questions, leave me unsure about what you think about these appeals to history. I mean, you've said that there's not a lot of text here. I agree with that.
I think that the way this case has been argued all around suggests that that's so. So then we're left with history, or are we left with history? You seem to appeal to history sometimes. It does disparate said this, but then repudiate the appeals to history at other times. And I guess I want to know what we're supposed to be doing when we're looking at this statute
and deciding this question with respect to all this historical evidence,
Scant or not scant as it may be.
Sure, Your Honor.
“So I think the best way I can break it down is this is that history's informative here.”
And the way it's most informative is that since Congress set, I mean, throughout our history,
I'm certainly since Congress set the federal election day. Election administration, our country, has been very, very dynamic. As I tried to highlight my opener, it was one thing in person. On the spot qualification checks by fellow voters. Valids were naturally received on election day.
All those features as soon as Congress had a reason to alter the methods by which a choice was made. It did so, but the one constant is that the voters, in a popular government, it's most critically the voters. The constant is that the voters make a final choice of officers by election day. So I think history shows that election administration is dynamic.
States have wide leeway.
They just have to make sure that the voters make a choice by election day.
Thank you. Thank you, Your Honor. This is Garza. Almost done, Mr. Stewart. You emphasized the Justice Cagan and many others that the final choice at least has to be done on election day.
And so recall would be a problem for you if it could happen. But you say that that doesn't happen in Mississippi. That's that's your position, right? Right. It's not permitted. If recall could happen, that would be a problem for your position.
“I think there potentially, I think there wouldn't be a final decision on election day, right?”
That's right. I think there's still be a factual question that we're whether I still have not been cited anything to say that recall is actually a thing that can happen in the world. I understand, but if it could happen, that would be a problem for your theory because the final choice wouldn't have happened on election day, right? Okay. So you say Mississippi prohibits that we've been through whether that's the case or not.
Very good. But let's say it did. Let's say there was a law prohibiting recall. How would it ever be enforced? Because how is a state to know?
And how is even a common carrier carrying an envelope to know whether that is a ballot that needs to be recalled? And who are you going to prosecute? Well, I think it could be enforced to other voter things. I mean, in our state there are notorization and affidavit requirements signing things.
“I think one of the, if this, if it were critical for the voter to say that there will be no recall,”
the voter could say, "I hereby commit that I will not attempt to or recall this package in any way shape or form." They could just add that sign it. I take the point about proof problems, but I mean, gosh, just as far as I mean violating state election laws in a state that really is anti fraud and really takes wide measures to enforce it, it's laws, that would be quite a thing for a voter to do. Well, in my hypothetical, which, you know, you say is unlikely there's swing an election and all that on recall.
But if history teaches anything, scant or not, scant. Instead, as soon as something's allowed, it will happen eventually, right? And, you know, so somebody, that my hypothetical happens and everybody recalls it. They're ballots. I'm just not sure what recourse the state would have against people who violated its anti recall.
I mean, if people are, say, recalling things to a common carrier, there's going to be some record that they recall those things. How's the state ever going to find out about it? I mean, I think the same, the same way it might go, you're going to go prosecute individuals. I mean, you're on, I'd say, like, if somebody is lying in an affidate that they're not going to recall something. I mean, if people are doing that with impunity, we have quite a problem, but it is a problem that the state can address and enforce.
I just don't know how they'd ever find out about it. I mean, I think, obviously, you know, some crimes are harder to find out and prosecute than others you're on, but I think it's still, I mean, people can do things, try to like tamper with ballots, all that sort of thing. I think it's just still a matter of respect and respect. Thank you.
Mrs. Cavittal? When did Mrs. Sippy switch to this method? 2020. 2024 added common carriers. And why?
It was first because of the pandemic.
I don't know that there's necessarily an answer about why as to the 2024 one in a clear way. And the other side makes a point when we're looking at history to the extent historical practices relevant that it only became widespread to allow it to be mailed by election day in more recent years. And that the predominant approach was to require receipt by election day throughout the historical practice you sight until very recently. How are we supposed to think about that?
I mean, I think it's the same way to think about, I think the broader history of election law is when states have kind of seen a problem. They've adapted and adjusted and often in the direction of making sure more votes can be counted. I mean, that was obviously a big thing when absentee voting just started to become a prominent thing. You know, certainly we care for much about our history of people showing up in person.
We realize that was very difficult from people away from home and that we wan...
And I think perhaps another realization, even though we had you Kava for 40 years, just as Kavanaugh. For military voters in particular, this is a perennial challenge about making sure that they can actually get their ballots in on time. I mean, that's perhaps why you a Kava voters in particular are a very popular group for post-election of ballots.
“Would you say that the states that require receipt by election day are disenfranchising voters?”
No, you're not, they're not your honor. I mean, a reasonable ballot deadline does not do that. I would ask, just, there are the practical barriers for those overseas military voters. But for the citizens who are not within that class, you would not use the term disenfranchisement to say it has to be received by election day.
No member third rather than, I hope I guess, if the five business days, no member tenth, you would not use that term to describe that correct?
I would not correct her. And then picking up on Justice Alitas questions, Professor Pilis, and others have said that "Late arriving ballots open up a risk of wipe might destabilize the election results if the apparent winner the morning after the election ends up losing due to the late arriving ballots charges of a rigged election could explode." The longer after election day, any significant changes in vote totals take place, the greater the risk that the losing side will cry that the election has been stolen and to quote.
“And my question is, my question is, one, is that a real concern to, does that factor into how we think about how to resolve the scant's text and the conflicting or evolving history here?”
I think I certainly respect the perception. I think one thing notable in this case, and I think helpful is that there has not been much of a showing about actual fraud from post election day ballot receipt itself. I mean, I think Justice Alito referred to, and I think this quote refers to the appearance of fraud. And is that a real concern? Is that something we should be thinking about? Confidence in the election process just curious how we factor that in here? Right, and I think if we go back to the same answer I had for Justice Alito about.
You know, there is simple text, straightforward text, and respecting the limits of that text, and looking at the animated history, I think it really was. It was the double voting fraud concern. I don't know that people have that particular concern. I think, you know, obviously people can be, you know, unhappy when a result flips. I think Congress may be able to take measures to address that, but I think there is no good evidence that Congress was doing that beyond preventing double voting in this context.
You have to have a deadline which you have now, and student having a deadline of number third rather than November 10th doesn't, for receipt doesn't disenfranchise anyone.
Why wouldn't it make more sense to take account in some respect of that concern as we think about how the text and history fit to cut. I mean, something the Congress was clearly trying to do was adopting a simple rule in this text, and I think a very simple rule is everybody must cast their ballot by election day.
“I mean, that's quite admirable. I mean, if you have an election, a ballot receipt deadline, there are certainly things to commend that. I think you're alluding to some of those justice cabinet, but there's also a question of, when do I vote?”
I'm not sure, you know, do I need to do it seven, you know, whatever it is, whereas, you know, if somebody wants to get all the information possible, they like voting on election day, you have a pretty nice clear simple rule, and that seems to double take quite well. Well, the simple rule, but if it arrives on November 11th you're out.
Right, but I think that's kind of baked into the risks you always get when you're doing, there are always some risks, you know, regrettably with mail invoiting.
You can eliminate some of those risks by voting in person, but. The risks would seem the same, no matter whether it's November 3rd or November 10th in other words, that it could take longer than a week for the mail to get there. The risk is there, but I think if you have election day ballot receipt, and I think what we're addressing, I think are more, the way I might frame the issues are. These are policy points, the question is the Congress wall off states from debating these policy points, I think the answer is no.
And I think states could very reasonably say, you know, look, we do want to get counting and get a result very fast, but we are concerned about these military voters, we do want voters to be able to get whatever information they want. I mean, the weekend before, you know, that used to be a big deal in elections, at least maybe it still could be in the future. And I think a state could say, hey, look, federal law didn't wall us off from doing this. We get that it has some things about it that other states might weigh differently, but we want to allow that for our voters.
Well, I take your point, but it really goes to just thinking about what election day or day of election means, but I take your point. Thank you. Thank you, Garner.
I want to be clear about what your definition of finality requires.
Would it require finality if the vote arrives by election day as well?
So let's imagine an absentee ballot that's put in the mail or sent by common carrier well in advance of election day and does is received and put in the ballot box by election day.
“Does that one have to be final or in other words, would it be a problem for you that the U.S. Postal Service permits recall for those ballots that are sent in advance?”
I guess what I'm asking is, do you have the same problem either way? You've taken a lot of questions and I have those questions about what the effect of this recallability is. And I guess my question is, I want to understand what your definition of finality is and whether it applies to the earlier absentee ballots as well. Did they have to be final such that it would be illegal to recall them pursuant to whatever regulation the Post Office has? Right, I think I got it.
Just as bear, let me see if I can do my best on it.
I think in theory if election day has not passed, there could be a window for somebody to. So it would be okay, it wouldn't be illegal for somebody to recall about it before election day. I guess I don't understand why. I mean, if it's allowed that, you're on it, we don't. So it would be okay for the state.
I know you don't allow it, but I guess what I'm wondering, I guess I'm struggling because if you're definition of the election or the vote or casting the vote, requires finality, I'm trying to understand why that would be different before the election. I'm saying before the election, I'm talking about receipt. For earlier sent absentee ballots and for later sent, it seems like the same will should apply regardless. But it seems like you're not, you're saying something different.
Yeah, I'm having a hard time conceiving kind of a dual track rule in that sort.
“So would it be, let me try to put it this way, would it be illegal for a state to permit absentee?”
But permit recall or just kind of be silent about this postal service regulation that permits recall or anything a common carrier did to permit recall is recall a problem even if it's a possibility for those earlier absentee ballots. Because you can't consider them final. All these questions that you've been taking are about whether you could really consider the ballot to be final if you could recall it. So I'm asking whether that same finality test applies for the earlier ballots. And I'm not sure you're on, I mean I think I guess I just keep coming back to you can't recall or change your vote or make it.
And that's true no matter when you send it. I think I mean certainly in our state and I think that's right your honor. But I mean as a matter of the federal law, it just seems to me that your definition has to be consistent. And it sounds like you're changing it for the earlier absentee ballots and saying finality has some kind of different force for the later received absentee ballots. Right, well I think a state has to do whatever it would need to do to guarantee that on election day all ballots every every cast vote is final and cannot be recalled.
But it doesn't have to be final at the time it's sent because it's okay to recall it if you send it two weeks in advance and you change your mind that's not a problem. I guess I'm having trouble seeing how the federal election day statute itself would necessarily. Well it's about your definition of election it's about your definition of what it means to cast a vote but let's put that aside.
Obviously there's a lot of talk about history in this case will the electoral count reform act was passed in 2022 and for the first time it defined election day.
Should that matter so should we be looking at how Congress understood election day to mean in the period of voting. What it thought in 2022 or should we be looking at the late 19th century in the Civil War practices.
“I think most vitally it still remains 1845 is the key day, especially given that we have statutes that are trying to manifest the achieved uniformity and what is required of all federal offices.”
So I do think 1845 is the key day. So Congress carried over in 2022 the same understanding of election day that had persisted throughout. I think that's right final choice of it. Thank you. Thank you.
Mr. Jackson. Let me just clarify this case is not about a Mississippi practice or policy related to recalling ballots is that right. That's right. So I guess I'm a little confused about those kinds of policy questions and I guess I think that the constitution's allocation of responsibility here actually makes this case about who decides.
There are a lot of policy questions just as the leader ran through several of...
Does it have to be postmarked?
I suppose we can add is recall allowed, et cetera, et cetera.
“But the question I think is whether Congress has precluded the states from making those calls drawing those lines in your position as I understand it is.”
No. That's correct. That the that the skantness of election day in the federal statute to actually is appointing your favor. Because it indicates the Congress was leaving it to the states to draw the various lines that might arise in this circumstance. Is that right?
That's right, your honor. And that's reinforced, for example, by the 1866 statute, which shows that when Congress wanted to be really prescriptive in this area, it was very prescriptive. It described this is what the states have to do. So if we were focused, really focused on what we're asked to answer here, which is is the are the states preempted by federal law from having post election day ballot deadlines, you would say no. No, no.
Congress just didn't decide that. Let me ask you about the history with respect to ruin. I guess I'm not sure I understood your answer to just to sort of my your.
Because it seems to me that ruin is not even the right methodology by which to be thinking about this, ruin applied to the second amendment.
Because the second amendment incorporated a preexisting right and the point of the history and tradition test was to try to evaluate the contours of that right. We don't have that dynamic here, we're trying I thought to figure out what congress meant when it included election day in its federal statutes. So it seems odd to me that the suggestion that the limitation on our understanding of congress's intent is somehow tied to the state's practices. I think that's right, you're on. I think the other thing I think the point I emphasize is that the idea of embodying a preexisting right confirms that there's something very much unchanging and the thing that we know about election administration.
It is very much been changing throughout the course of our kind. It's been changing throughout the course in a way that undermines the notion that there was one consistent practice first of all. For that congress's law, the meaning of election day in the federal statutes somehow was tied to what the state's practices were about that. I mean, I think this is your original point that there were lots of different practices. And so to the extent we were saying, oh, you could only look at election day in the federal statute to mean exactly what the states were doing back at that time.
This imparals a lot of different things, not just post election day ballot deadlines, right? That's right, you're on.
“And the only way to explain all of these changes is to read them in line with plain tax in the limits of history, which is to say election is a final choice.”
I mean, otherwise you have to do what my, my friends have to do, which is, hey, look, we're going to pick out the one practice from these 19th century codes that we like. out received, say that's what an election is, and just ignore in person voting qualification check on the spot by fellow voters, and that's just not sound history. Can I ask you one final thing about the Amicus Brief from the Society for the Rule of Law Institute? Because I found it very interesting, and I didn't really know what your view of it was.
That Amicus Brief focused on the electoral college, and Congress is setting it up back in 1787, with the understanding that the casting of votes can happen on a particular day, and the receipt of those votes by election officials can happen on a different day.
“And in fact, the way the electoral college is set up, I think, at the time, Congress”
permitted in 1792 about a month to elapse between the casting of votes, which by the way it called election day, and the receipt of the votes by the electors submitted them to the president of the Senate up to a month after. So I think that's, to the extent we're worried or thinking about historical evidence, that seems to me to be pretty significant and compelling historical evidence of Congress's understanding of what was required by election day versus the receipt of those
ballots at some subsequent point. Correct? Yeah, I think that's, that's well stated, you're honored that the other thing I'd tie to in the same Amicus Brief, and I think the brief,
the Amicus Brief does a nice job of tying into this, is that the key thing is choice choosing,
the constitution refers to choosing choice, those kind of verbs, and that's why that sort of thing
Is allowed at the beginning.
process system, when the electors cast their vote, right? Right. And that is distinguished. I'm just
trying to make clear that the casting of the vote and the receiving of the votes historically
“have been conceived of as two different things that can actually happen at different times, right?”
I think so, you're on. Thank you. Thank you, Council. Mr. Clement. Mr. Chief Justice, may it please to the court. All agree that elections for federal office have to end on the day of the election specified by Congress. And all agree that you can't have an election unless you receive ballots, and there must be some deadline for ballot received. Nonetheless, Mississippi insists that ballots can trickle in days or even weeks after election day.
That position is wrong as a matter of text, precedent, history, and common sense.
Mississippi all but concedes that the original public meaning of election included both offering to vote and the receipt of that vote or ballot by election officials. And of course, the key distinction between voting and an election is in an election it involves the combined action of voters and election officials. As this court underscored in its decision against foster against love. And of course, Mississippi insists that at the time these statutes were passed,
ballot receipt and the casting of the ballot were so inextricably intertwined, no one would have thought of one without the other. That seems to me to be a damning admission, but it also ignores the advent of field and proxy voting in the Civil War and the enormous efforts that states went to to ensure that all of the ballots, whether by proxy or by field vote, were received by election day. In the state's view, all of those percolian efforts were for not or were entirely gratuitous.
Now, the state's position actually works even worse as a matter of common sense.
“If somebody in golfport the day after the election asks, is the election over?”
The common sense answer is no, it's not, the ballots are still coming in. And if somebody asks to one, the truthfully answer is, we don't know yet, the ballots are still coming in, and they may trickle in for weeks or months. And in fact, they may trickle in for weeks or months with or without a postmark in differing ways in differing states. That reality gives the lie to the idea that we have a uniform national election day. I welcome the court's questions.
How would you define the day of election? I would say that the day of the election is the day when it's the last day in which all the ballots are cast and they are received into official custody. So how would you treat early voting as compared to late reception of votes? So I would say, I think the best place to look for a treatment of early voting is the crisis decision by Judge Kleinfeld in the night circuit. Because after
foster against love, there was a suggestion in foster against love that maybe early voting is a problem. He rejected that claim based on two things. One is the distinct history of early voting,
and the second is the idea that was explicit in this court's decision in foster against love,
that election day is the date of consummation. So I would say, under our theory, early voting is permissible, largely because it has a different history, and because of this idea that the election day is the date where the election is consummated. Would you spend a few more minutes on, or at least if you could have a little bit more time on the voting during civil war? There was some suggestion
“that that's an example of late reception of votes, and I think in your intro, and was my thinking,”
that it was not that proxy voting was a way to make sure that the vote occurred on election day as opposed to afterwards. Well, not surprisingly, just as Thomas he was exactly right. So proxy voting is the thing that happened in the civil war that is most analogous to absentee voting. And the thing that is most striking is I think five states had proxy voting. Every one of those five states required the votes, the ballots to be received by election officials back home by election day. Now that's an
incredibly inconvenient thing that was done in the civil war to ensure the ballots were received by election day. And under the states view, they didn't need to do that. Now, it's really no different in the context of field voting because there were like maybe a dozen states, if you're not going to count the Confederate states, there are about a dozen states that did field voting. Again, every one of those ensure that the ballots were received into official custody by election day.
And of course, most of the states went to enormous efforts to replicate the machinery of
The ballot box and everything else in the field.
that didn't vary at all was that the ballots had to be received into official custody by election
“day. And just one last thought on this civil war practice, my friends only real answer to the”
idea that at 1845, there was an understanding that everybody would have had that of course, the election involves both the offered a vote and receiving the vote the ballot into official custody. He's only answered that as well, like nobody, the issue hadn't ripened, that nobody even thought that you could divide the two. But the issue ripened in the civil war and the issue ripened in such a way that every state required the ballot to be received into
official custody by election day. And then that certainly informs what Congress is thinking in 1872
when they extend the presidential election day deadline to the congressional rate. Mr. Clement,
what do I do with the two states during the civil war? Roadout, Nevada, you say five favor you, at least two, don't. Nevada simply designated three of the highest officers in command. Didn't swear them in, just said three officers in the command can create a ballot box or suitable receptacle for votes and collect the votes of the soldiers with little further formality. Those military officers then would mail those ballots in and they would be counted
whether they arrived on election day or after. What do we do with Rhode Island that simply directed soldiers to deliver a written or printed ballot with the name of the person voted for, or did the officer commanding the regimen to which he belonged? That officer wasn't sworn in as a state official either and we see could happen thereafter. So it's not, yes, many states believe as they did at the time that voting had to be in person, that voting had to be not had to be
by voice instead of by paper. Lots of states had lots of beliefs about what a proper election
“should look on. But how do we deal with the outliers? Or you just want to ignore them?”
No, I don't want to ignore the outliers. I actually think Rhode Island and Nevada helped me and my side of this case and I think that's because they did designate somebody. They might not have given them an oath but they designated somebody as an official to receive the votes of the votes. And they had to go there. So they're here, what's the difference between the post office and a common carrier? It's the official. You want an individual person is that it? Well, I want
somebody who's cloaked with government authority. So that's one difference. But there's a critical
second difference. But it's not state authority. Meaning you're now expanding what you're saying as government authority. So what I would say is it was government authority and I would say that my understanding of the history is that all those federal officers voluntarily accepted the responsibility, whether they took an oath or not. And I could have named her and so could anybody else. I'm not moved. The point is that it permitted someone else to deliver the item,
a final cast vote to deliver it and you received that. Under your theory of this case and I think you and the government disagree on this. You believe that absentee voting by the military and overseas voters, the various laws that federal laws under which states have preceded with respect to those votes are illegal. Or they're not saying what everybody has understood them to say that states can accept absentee ballots after the election. Military and overseas ballots.
I don't think any vote is unlawful. Let me try to address how I think you would reconcile
“you will cover with the election day statutes. And to start I think it's important to recognize”
that you will cover it is not limited to the federal general election. So you will cover applies to primary elections to run off elections and special elections in federal general elections. The election day statutes only apply to the general federal election. So the way I would reconcile the two is to say that all the references in you will cover to state deadlines are perfectly fine, not pre-empted at all, not displaced at all, not even anomalous with respect to the
primarys, the run-offs and special elections. Then the court has a job to do in the federal general election as to say like kind of witches the specific witches the general. I think the more logical way to do it would be to say that with the understanding in this court if you decide in our favor that for the federal general election the ballots have to be in by election day. I would say that we should have another president now because wasn't it in Florida that they were
counting military votes after you see? So with all the respect that is the redest of right
Hearings because what happened in the 2000 election in Florida is that pursua...
that was entered by a federal court because Florida was violating the principal provision of
“you a comma which says you have to give the ballot absentee ballots to the overseas voters 45”
days in advance because Florida was violating that there had to be a consent decree to create a remedy that was not provided. What happens was that the judge made up the deadline, not the state. But I wanted to how do you deal with the soldier voting act in 1942 that permitted ballots for the extension of absentee ballots? So the 1942 act at least is I understand it again. It's not addressed solely to general elections and then with respect to general elections it says
that the military special SVA or whatever it was the special military ballot had to come in on by the time the polls closed on election day. So I actually think the 1942 act is fully supportive of our position here. So the DOJ has been acting illegally when it has sued states but not following the act the u-kava. No, no, again remember that the u-kava's principal protection is the provision this is in 302 of the act not 303 and 304 but the 302 act provision that says that you have to get the
ballots to overseas voters 45 days in advance of the election and interestingly in the single
most important provision in u-kava it ties the deadline to the date of the election. What do we do
with congressing process in the manner provided by law for absentee ballots and the states involved? That's q-n-kava and at the time the hearings were being held on it, 2112 states were identified as counting absentee ballots after election day. So it just ignored it and decided it was going to exempt out a little part of it but not everything. With respect just to sort of more
“cinema or that's why you have to remember that u-kava is not focused only on the federal general”
election which is the only thing where congress has specified a federal deadline. So it makes perfect certain but does that help you or hurt you the fact that it is broader? I mean it's broader
in the way that you describe it applies to all of these different elections but it doesn't make
the distinction that you are making it says with respect to all of them state absentee ballot deadlines should apply. You're encouraging us to treat the general election differently because you interpret election day with respect to the general election statute to have a defined time as of election day but that is not what this statute appears to be doing. So I think it helps us and I think it helps us because to the extent you're concerned with those references to state election deadlines
they're inevitable. If congress is going to address anything other than the general federal election it has to refer to the state deadlines for receiving ballots because there are no federal deadlines for any election other than the federal general election. If that's true Mr. Clemente would think that congress would say you know with respect to the deadlines that there's no separate federal requirement extra rule and with respect to the deadlines that there is a federal requirement why rule
but it doesn't do anything like that it treats them all of a piece and we know that for many of these elections states were setting their own deadlines and congress and passing these statutes didn't suggest any kind of distinction between those elections and these elections. So Justice Kagan as with almost every statutory question that comes to this court congress could have made it easier they could have done all that and they didn't and I think it just
that's correct. But you know so what do we take from that I mean it seems what they took from that is that they thought that this state function of setting ballot receipt deadlines was something
“that was a state function and that's what they took from it and so they wrote the statutes this”
way where with respect to all elections the states were setting their own receipt deadlines. So I don't think I don't see that in the text that doesn't seem even logical to me I wouldn't think the one place we were going to especially defer to the states with respect to the federal general election deadline is with overseas and military voters where the interests of the federal government are probably paramount but I just want to be clear about this if you read the statutes
different and want to reconcile them the way that the SD does we have no objection to that. We just think the better way to read these two statutes is to reconcile them than the way that we do and that would have one benefit which is don't forget that in at least 20 states they take the election day ballot receipt deadline seriously. So if you simply say in this case that that election
Day ballot receipt deadline is true of all 50 states then every overseas vote...
voter is going to be treated the same and they'll still have 45 days to get their ballot in and
one other thing about Mississippi in particular Mississippi has provisions in its election code that are specifically accommodate overseas military voters and overseas voters and it's not the ballot extension deadline that we have challenged here. There is a specific provision that says for you a COVID voters and you a COVID voters only they can email their ballots in. So like the idea that anybody is going to be disenfranchised here when they oversee voters and only the overseas
voters have the option of emailing in the absentee ballot that they get from Mississippi seems to
“meet a completely misplaced and the concern should really be the heartland cases and remember”
as Justice Alito alluded to you have eight states that don't even require a postmark and there is nothing in Mississippi's theory that turns on the existence or the non-existence of a postmark and that's probably a good thing because the post services make clear that they don't even postmark all of the mail and postmarks have their own problems. I mean the main mail box the post box in post office rather in Chicago stays open 24/7. So in all the other polls close in Illinois or
every other state at 8pm post box the post office is still open till midnight. Now I'm not here to say that there could ever be voting fraud in Chicago but the possibility that there's a four-hour window where people can go get their ballots, absentee ballots postmarked after all of the returns are in and they know that oh this this is the election where these things could turn the result that does not seem entirely correct. So what I'm going to ask you a question about the offer
to vote in the vote so historically it seems like the offer to vote was then you had to adjudicate the voter's qualifications and then if the qualifications were met then the the official received the vote and then it was put into the ballot box and as I understand that Mississippi still has sort of a similar system because they have to adjudicate voter qualifications as well as accept the vote. So you sometimes say you know you on the United States when the
ballot box closes and you sometimes say receipt are those two different things and to the voters qualifications have to be adjudicated by election day as well. I don't I don't think they're exactly
“the same thing I mean in some sense I think the ballot box closing is a nice kind of”
common sense capture for the idea that the election ends on election day. Now I think with respect to the voter the you know the candidate the qualifications challenge rather most of that is solved in the current system by registration requirements which they didn't have historically.
So we think the critical thing is there are two things that have always been absolutely indispensable
in elections and that's the casting but also the receipt into official custody. And one thing I want to make clear about this is Mississippi still takes receipt into official custody very seriously and it is indispensable. They just have a different deadline they have a five-day deadline and we've had a lot of discussion about the possibility of recall and I think that is a problem for Mississippi but they have an even bigger problem in my mind which is the November 11th problem
which is to say is just as cavern off pointed out if the ballot arrived six business days late Mississippi doesn't count it it's annullity and under the state statute they destroy it. But let me return you to the adjudication question because that's really the you know the Mississippi local officials brief says that they do not adjudicate the qualifications of all ballot all ballots received even by election day because it takes them more time to compare the signatures
and process them and I'll just get cut to the chase the heart of my concern is that historically it seemed like both of those things happened on election day whether we're talking about civil war voting on the field etc but I understand that under your theory we can separate those and say
“that only receipt matters but adjudication can in fact happen afterwards is that correct?”
I mean that's the position we're taking in this case I mean I haven't to be you know I've been on that time studying the civil war history on ballot receipt so I haven't studied everything
about that election kind of qualification might might sort of first cut answer standing here
is that can be understood as part of the canvassing process and that can take place after. But I guess why can you separate out if historically those two went hand in hand that the qualifications there was the offer to the vote and vote it seems to it seems odd to say that the election is concluded by receipt when historically both of those things happened at the same time so why is that one piece of history plucked out so two things one like maybe I have another
challenge that I haven't thought of you know so I don't want to like utterly foreclose that but the reason I'm focused on ballot receipt is a it's what's directly an issue here but also be it's the thing that to this day every state considers indispensable no state you watching
Ton is the one that lets 21 days go by but no state says that you don't have ...
ballot receipt deadline at all and under Mississippi law it's not despite what they want to tell you the ballot is not final when it's submitted the ballot is final when it's received by election officials within five days and you can have all the certifications that this was before election day and I haven't no to rise and if it comes in on the six business day this is the November 11th problem what the state does is they treat it as a nullity and under the state statute
they direct it to be destroyed so the ballot doesn't become final just when it's submitted the ballot becomes final when it is submitted and under Mississippi law it is received into official custody by the registrar within five business days that's finality under Mississippi law and our humble submission is finality should take place on election day thank you council just as Thomas anything further does this lead him we have lots of phrases that involve two words
the last of which the second of which is day labor day memorial day George Washington's birthday
and dependence day birthday and election day and they're all particular days so if we start with that if I have nothing more to look at then the phrase election day I think this is the day in which everything is going to take place and we're almost everything and then we have three points in time 1844 1872 1914 and we can ask what would people have thought on those days is meant by this phrase election day which which of those should we choose which of those days dates should we choose
well I think you could choose any of the three I mean honestly I think the single best one if you're just going to choose one is 1872 and the reason I say that is because 1914 is the latest in time
“but that's what the one that congress gave the least thought to because they it was right after the”
17th amendment they just said yeah whatever the rule is for the house representatives will use that for the senate okay so in 1872 someone sees election day and maybe they start with the idea okay they particular day and then they say but I remember the Civil War and a big exception was made there were there were different practices in the Civil War wasn't everybody going to a particular polling place and voting so what then can we we take from that should we just take from
that well this wasn't an incredible national emergency where extraordinary measures had to be taken
what should we take from that what within ordinary person have thought election day meant in 1872 I think they would have said that's the day by which at a bare minimum the ballots have to be cast and received into official custody and I think they would have to the extent they were thinking
“about the Civil War history I think the thing that would have impressed them is that even at a”
time of great national emergency every one of the states insisted that the ballots be received into official custody by election day whether by proxy or by field voting nobody said well you know it's a Civil War let's give them a month nobody said that and people literally went into harm's way in order to do field voting and they all did it by election day that seems to me to powerfully reinforce the idea that in 1872 if you told anybody hey all this means is you got to
cast your ballot but the state can receive it for up to 21 days later with or without a postmark I think they would have thought that you were talking about a different kind of let's take the last of the days 1914 my understanding is that Maryland departed from your position a couple of years after that did anybody say at that time wow Maryland is is violating the election day statute
“I mean I don't know that they did in 1918 I don't know all the details of that I think actually”
the first couple of these statutes that my friends try to count really are something different
which is they really allowed you to sort of vote in one district by election day and then have that election official give it to another election official so I don't think some of those count what I would say though is 1944 there was Montana passed an extraordinary law that tried to extend the ballot deadlines for ballot receipt and they did it in World War II and they did it for the best of intentions and in the Maddox case which the party site in the briefs it's this kind
of extraordinary case where the Republican party and the Democratic party of Montana both joined forces to go to the Montana Supreme Court and said is this law lawful and the Montana Supreme Court said it's not lawful it violates state law but they also said it violates the federal law specifying election day thank you yes or so Mayor but the rule of decision was based on state
Law and Maddox what is I disagree I mean you can all read it for yourself I m...
friends on the other side say that I've read the case like several times in DC I vote by going
to a ballot box that's on the city streets all over the city streets is that receipt by a state official I just go to the ballot box it's locked I don't know and don't remember if it's time stamped or not but the city I don't even know if it picks it up before election day it's certainly picks it up at some point is that legal under your theory I think that's compliant with the federal election there's no state official who has received it a ballot box as it's it's official state
“custody and I think it's important to remember that when ballots come into official state custody”
and this is true under Mississippi law as well at that point the state treats it very seriously and establishes a chain of custody I mean if you want to look at in the in the petition of Hendick's at Mississippi Statutes the the the provincial we're different it it's different for you in kinds because military officer like Rhode Island and Nevada during the civil war even though they were federal officers not sworn in in the state they were official enough
is that it it was official empty ballot box with no person next to it is official enough so but the postal services not the postal services not I don't know all the details about what Nevada and Rhode Island did I'm actually not even sure the Nevada Statutes ever implicated because
Nevada didn't become a state until the civil war was basically over but in all events I think the
“statute that's issues here it's worth reading if you look at 89 a of the petition appendix I mean”
they go to Mississippi once it's in the ballot box and this is true of the absentee ballots that are received within five days they they go into lockdown the the the the register is told to record the number of ballots in the box at the end of every day they are specifically treated essentially as to have a chain of custody to ensure that if somebody alleges there was monkey business in this election they have a clear record of chain of custody that can show
no there was not there's nothing like that when you drop it in the mailbox there's nothing like that when you use FedEx and I don't know like I mean you know they say it's illegal to recall your ballot but the postal office allows you to do that the FedEx allows you to do that is just this corsage indicated I don't think there's any way of the state would even know it have a state government official lawyer telling us on behalf of the state how to read their laws
where are we on an issue that was forfeited below and not raised below are going to assume to the contrary now it was raised below this was raised in the reply brief in the court of appeals when my friend referred to it not being raised to the till the reply brief I assume he was referring to in the fifth circuit but in the fifth circuit decision so it's properly before this court just came I'm wondering what you make of the 2020 to amendment
because that pretty clearly suggests that voting can take place not just on a day but in a period and what or meet to make of the fact that Congress just a few years ago said there's a period of voting and we're fine with that so to me the most sort of striking thing if we're talking about the the same statute the electoral count reform act or whatever it is to me the most striking thing is there's one change to the federal election day statute in particular and it creates
a possible exception for forced majority events then I would view that as the only exception that Congress created yeah but the exception for forced majority events assumes a baseline of a period of voting it talks about a state modifying the period of voting for those special events but the baseline is that the state has a period of voting which it then modifies for forced majority events so so I think that this is not like some special exception it's it's
it's an exception in the statute that assumes that a state is going to have not a day of voting but very likely a period of voting so I would think that the most the period of voting would refer to is the practice of early voting which we're not taking issue with here and as I said that has a distinct history but I don't think they were saying the period of voting could last until after the election
“because if that's what they had in mind there'd be no reason to create an exception for forced”
majority events that just be part of the period and could you tell me going back to this where not taking issue with early voting how it is that you're not taking issue with early voting because every time I sort of tried to state what your rule is it seems to me it's a rule that
prevents early voting because you're basically saying there are two things that have to happen
and they have to happen on election day and it's the voting and you know the casting of the vote and the receipt of the vote and both of those things have to be on election day and just like a normal
Person says okay well when I early vote I'm not doing that on that first Tues...
ordinary person would think that and for what it's worth like a couple of ordinary people read your
“foster against love decision and thought whoa this gets rid of early voting and they brought”
challenges in the ninth circuit and they brought challenges in the sixth circuit and all those challenges were rejected they did it right in the wake of let me suggest you that they were rejected because it just seems inconceivable that on the basis of this kind of evidence we would reject these practices that are so entrenched in 30 states but the problem still remains is that your theory would have us reject them no I don't think it would and I mean you know it's my theory so I'll tell
you what it is these things have to be consummated by election day that's a I'm not making that word up I it's not the word I would make up if I were making up words but it's the word that this court used in foster against love so that's where the theory comes from it comes from the word that this court used in foster yes and and that was you know because it was a word that we used in foster is the premise for your being able to separate what Mississippi's law from every early
voting law and the world even though you're basic theory should say that the early voting
laws are also no with respect I mean I said two things when I first answered this question the
“differential history and I you know I think it's worth reading judge Kleinfield's opinion on this”
it's a keyslink case in the night circuit because he goes through this in quite some detail and he admits there's actually a pretty good argument based on the text and uh and and foster that early voting is problematic but he nonetheless even though he thinks it's a pretty good argument comes to the conclusion not because he thought it was crazy but because the history is different which was Marshalled in that case in particular and foster talks about everything needing
to be consummated by election day and I don't think it was just a random word it's trying to explain
the unanimous decision in foster against love which says you know there there was there's voting
and there was uh receipt of ballots and the problem was it all happened a month too early thank you does this course it's on early voting I just want to see if I've got it right both sides agree that there needs to be a final decision by the voter
“and receipt by election day correct well I don't think so I think well I don't think they agree”
with receipt by election day receipt by somebody okay if you're gonna I'm gonna do that the reason I trip up on that I know but just okay sorry I'm just trying to make sure I understand there needs to be some final decision by the voter and receipt by somebody by election day on that I think you two agree I think the disagreement is receipt by whom and for you it's an election official and for your friend on the other side it could be my neighbor is that a fair
summary of your of your views I is because it seems to me you both agree that the final decision needs to be made by election day which both would both of you therefore would permit early voting so I don't disagree much but what I would say is my friend's position is a little bit more nuanced than that because he thinks that sort of selection and submission to the somebody is a net before election day is a necessary condition but it's not sufficient because Mississippi law cares very
much about receipt by the registrar and if the vote is submitted to the somebody before election day but it's not received by the registrar until the sixth day it's a noody so that's just the subtlety that I wanted to know I appreciate that because at least as I read Mississippi law you're right that that isn't accepted until an election official marks it accepted that's its own rule but it seems to be running away from that here by saying at least as I I'm understanding I'm
being misunderstanding at least as I understand it because they're saying no once it goes into FedEx or to my neighbor or whomever it's it's received effectively on election day see I don't think they've quite gone that far because you know they can try to quibble about the sort of receipt in the rule in the reg but the statute itself absolutely requires receipt by the registrar within five days and then the statute itself goes on to say that if it's not received by the registrar within five days
even though it's submitted even though it went to FedEx it's a noody and it must be destroyed I mean Mississippi takes it receipt deadline so seriously that if you miss their receipt deadline your ballot is destroyed if who were to rule against you is there anything that would limit states from allowing receipt by election officials up until the day of the next Congress
Oh the slippery slope problem on the other side I don't think there's anythin...
that and you know maybe maybe you know maybe the next state can figure out a way to have an election
without even anybody receiving anything I don't know but that seems to me to be a large reason for why election day should meet election day and election should mean casting and receipt into official custody to stop that slippery slope on on time and how about means do you see any principal way we could draw a line on on means and say okay common carriers are different than bob see I think it's tricky especially because all of these statutes purport to be time regulations
not manner regulations and the thing to keep in mind is that under article two the congressional powers limited to time regulations manner is left to the states under article two's election clause or electors clause so it's a little different than article one where where a Congress
“of it wanted to correct the means and so that's why I think it's either all are nothing in”
terms of their position and they have no basis for distinguishing the states that say like Illinois that say 14 days with or without a postmark by anybody by anybody this is cabra I follow up on general stewards who decides argument I think you're looking at the text and isolation
day for the election first instinct might be in person voting on that day is what that text literally
meant but of course you acknowledge early voting you acknowledge absentee voting are consistent with the statute and then we have obviously a range of historical practices that deviate from that text if you thought literally it meant in person voting on that day and then when general steward says is well given all that history you can't read it literally and I think Professor Morales and Nicka's brief says as well and you have to take account of that historical
practice and really it's up to Congress to fix this if they think there's a policy problem which
“would going on in the states I think that's a summary of some of what he's saying leave it up to”
Congress for all these policy concerns just want to get your response to how we think about the
historical practice and the text and then the who decides sure so on the historical practice the thing that I think is remarkable is this unbroken historical tradition at least from 1845 to 1914 there is no example of somebody of an election with a state having a ballot receipt deadline that's that's other than by the election day so nothing I mean they cobbled together one state at a time to get them starting in 1918 and I think some of those statutes are distinguishable
but it's common ground that there's nothing during the whole time that these statutes are enacted where you don't have ballot receipt by election days so to me if we're going to do original public meaning and then yeah Congress could fix this either way however you decide this case you're not going to have the last word Congress is going to have the last word but if we're going to take original public meaning seriously I think the reason Congress hasn't revisited this is because it doesn't
have to it's already fixed this problem now on the morally brief you know I would take the bitter with the sweet on that which is what he says is you know I don't think the text gets you all the way there I beg to differ I think the text original public meaning gets you all the way there but what he says should be the tiebreaker is what rule does a better job with dealing with actual or perceived fraud and one of the things I found striking in that brief is he quotes senator
atherton from 1844 debate leading to the 1845 statute an atherton says in response to some argument that I will you haven't proved all the fraud or whatever that was going on in the pipe laying scandals and all of those other things because it wasn't just crossing lines and he says real or perceived it doesn't make a difference because even perceptions of fraud are going to make a huge difference in undermining public confidence in the elections and you I think quoted from
Professor Pildis who I think got this exactly right I mean if you have an election and the election is going to turn on later arriving ballots in a way that means what everybody kind of thought was the result on election day ends up being the opposite a week later 21 days later the losers are not going to accept that result full stop they won't and that is bad for our system and so
“if you think there's a little bit of ambiguity and we're in a post chevron world so you have to”
resolve it I would resolve it in the favor of reading the statute to eliminate fraud or perceived fraud in election and that I think we cause you to rule why have so many states allowed this then so states have only allowed it relatively recently as one of your questions you know averted to
I think one reason that they've done it is some states do want to accommodate...
voters I do think that there are other ways to do that than the ballot deadline as I've talked about
“and I think Mississippi's voted with their feet I don't think anybody's going to be disenfranchised”
in Mississippi if when you can vote if you're only if you're overseas you can vote by email so I think Mississippi solved that in a much more targeted way so I think you know that's at least kind of part of the way that I would think about why states have done it and then really the other there was there was an uptick in COVID as sort of a one-time accommodation for COVID and a lot of states
did it for COVID and then sort of retreated Mississippi for whatever reason stuck with what they did for the first
time in COVID you were asked about the 2000 election I don't think you were able to finish that answer the one you want to say about that. Yeah I mean I just want to be emphatic that that is the redest of red herrings because what happened in 2000 was that the voting deadline was extended pursuant to a consent decree and the reason there was a consent decree is that Florida had violated the principal protection of U.Kava which is getting the absentee ballots to the voters overseas
well in advance of the election and so having blown that deadline there was a consent decree that extended the receipt date we don't have any quarrel with that you know federal courts have the
authority to remedy violations of U.Kava and I don't think extending the deadline is off the table
“as a judicial remedy though actually I think in 2026 as opposed to 2000 maybe the judicial”
remedy would be to let the U.Kava voters vote by email even in a state unlike Mississippi that doesn't allow it is we looked at a majority of states allow overseas voter either facts or email voting so I think that would probably in 2026 that would be the better remedy but in 2020 pursuant to consent decree that was perfectly permissible so anybody who tells you the 2000 election came out different is not looking at the facts of that Harris case in the consent decree. Last
one if you were to prevail here and say our decision was issued in June personnel issues with the states
for the upcoming fall elections. I don't think so I think this issue because it really sort of
just deals with the state and the receipt of the ballots I think June would give them plenty of time and remember it only affects the this issue only affects the general election it doesn't affect
“primaries so like the only thing I can even think of that would raise like a lurking problem”
is you won't want the states if this court decides in our favor you won't want a state absentee ballot that's misleading about the receipt deadline but those deadlines those ballots have to go out 45 days before the general election so what's that like mid September or something so there's plenty of time I don't think there's a percent problem thank you does this spirit so I'm trying to figure out how to think about the history and you said I'm going to go that what we have is the
original public meaning of election day at the time in the late 19th century in 1917 etc was ballot receipt and you invoke the various state laws that required receipt by election day but we don't have to my knowledge so this is what I want you to correct me if I'm wrong a rich history of original public meaning in the way that we often think of it of people saying or expressing views that yes this is what it means to elect this is what election day means stripped down to its essence it means
the taking of the ballot into official custody what we have is state practices I think there are a lot of really good policy reasons to require and we've talked about some of those this morning lots of good policy reasons to require all the ballots to be in by election day do we have evidence either of people saying like this is what we understand election day to require as opposed to treat us as they're summarizing some of the cases and is there any reason to think that these laws
were adopted because of a concern about preemption by federal federal law as opposed to just this is a really good policy this is how election should run so we're in the realm of congressional actions under the election clause and the electors clause so everything they're doing is preemptive and that's particularly obvious in the context of trying to get a uniform national election day for the general election so I think we're like in the absolute epicenter of intertribal here
because not only is it like sort of preemptive by its very nature but it's Congress trying to create uniformity across the state lines so it was Congress was sort of appalled by what it happened with the staggered deadlines and disparate deadlines in the states so I think the preemption part of that is kind of relatively straightforward now on the history you know this is where I just think
The Civil War practice is so powerful because my friend says well when they w...
past like the difference between casting and receiving the ballot into individual official custody
hadn't ripened but the Civil War ripened it and the one thing every state including Rhode Island in Nevada did is they said it has to be in some kind of official custody by election day and I agree with you that's striking but what I'm maybe I didn't maybe I wasn't clear before I agree with you that that's striking but do we have any reason to think that they did that because they thought well it has to happen on election day or by election day which is a deviation from what the
Texas right but do we have any reason to think that they did it because they thought they had to
“as opposed to this is really good policy so we should do it this way no I think we I mean to me”
like you know like I can I connect the dots precisely no but like they did it because they thought that's when an election means and that's when an election day means they thought it would just be unthinkable we'd no longer be an election or an election day it wouldn't be happening on election day if it could take place at ballot we could take place some other time isn't that true of early voting too and I guess it goes back to Justice Kagan's question I mean it seems to me
that if you look at the historical practice what an election meant was showing up in person and casting your vote and being qualified as the voter on that same day and then there were deviations for war essentially but why would absentee voting in a widespread way by civilians or early voting why is that permissible because if we're just going to say that historically it needs to look like
it always looked how come those features fall out I would say they probably fall out because
nobody thinks they're essential which is to say you know if the state wanted to have like early
“voting but like no voting on election day maybe that would be a hard case but you know those I think”
it'd been understood and there's a different history for those because if a state wants to say you can come in and you can mark your ballot and put it into official custody a week early that doesn't sort of initiate the whole idea of an election day whereas if you can still have ballots being received after election day I think that initiates the whole notion of election day and if you're interested in Professor Morley or Justice Kagan on as typewriters there's not the same concerns
about fraud about the losers not being able to accept the outcomes when it comes to early voting but there's a distinct problem with voting with ballots that come in and as particularly if they're going to tip an election and as Justice Gorsuch indicated like maybe it's happened maybe it hasn't but it will and at that point there's just no way the loser is going whoever it is is going to accept that outcome and the supporters aren't going to accept the outcome and so that's something
that I just don't think is implicated about early voting. Thank you. Justice Jackson. Except people accepted the possibility of that outcome for a hundred plus years now because this idea of the votes being cast by election day and counted after election day has been around right? It's not like we're talking about a brand new thing from Mississippi from the standpoint of no one ever had a post-election day ballot deadline before and so I guess I'm just
concerned about the various conclusions that you would have us draw from these historical practices because it seems to me that we have a very long history of states having a variety of different ballot receipts received deadlines to include after election day. So kind of three points about that I mean one is I don't think it's true that there was this hundred year sort of pattern and nobody raised an
“objection. I think the matrix case in 1944 is a powerful example that the idea that election day”
means election day is not something that only occurred to lawyers in the post-COVID world. The second
thing I would say is as a practical matter you know if one or two states at one time in the 1920s had a law that deviated maybe that's not something that really makes that big a difference but in a world where some states essentially have all of the voting be absentee. Lots of states have gone to no excuse absentee voting. It may be that a lurking problem has just become much more obvious because of the magnitude of what's going on in this case. Because I don't understand why that isn't
the variety that you're describing isn't a strike against your view that Congress has included this. I mean others of my colleagues have looked at or talked about Congress legislating in this area. They are obviously aware that there are states that are doing this and they have not spoken to it. They have not specifically precluded it. Now you say that maybe that's because they assumed that election day in this federal statute that we're examining from a hundred years ago does the work.
But Congress is today considering an election-related statute that would specifically prohibit
This, which means that Congress probably didn't understand its existing legis...
I mean I haven't studied the current legislation. I think it probably does quite a bit more than
this and probably affects other elections like primary elections. I don't know for sure though. I haven't studied it. But it does address this. It addresses it specifically addresses and we're talking about the make elections great again act. Specifically addresses of the idea of preempting state post-election day ballot deadlines. And so if that's true then it seems like as though Congress doesn't believe that its current legislation has done this work.
Well Congress probably doesn't know how this court is going to decide this case. So it probably can legislate against that veil of ignorance where it is. The worry is that you want this court to decide the case rather than have Congress do it. No and that's I mean two things I
think are important. However this court decides this case Congress has the power to revisit it.
“That's I think common ground among the parties. The second thing that's common ground among the”
parties is that the federal election day statutes preempt something. And so the only question is what do they preempt? Do they just preempt casting ballots and giving it to the mail service as my friend suggests, which as Justice Gorsuch elucidated leads to a huge slippery slope problem, or does it require both submitting and receipt into official custody? And how do everybody agrees to preempt something? How do you respond to the notion that when we look as the society
for rule of law institute suggests that we do at historical practices with respect to electors and specifically Congress in 1787 adopting a resolution establishing that quote the day fixed for the election of the president in quote that that's the day on which the election electors will vote and transmit their votes and that the president of the Senate would receive their votes at a later date. So this concept of casting one's vote versus the receipt of the vote was very early on
distinguished. Yeah, but I actually think that example works in our favor because what's going on there is there essentially two separate sort of elections, if you will, or processes that are being adjudicated or overseen by different sovereigns. So what happens first is the states address the appointment of the electors in that state and then later that has to be received and certified in the Senate because then in the Senate they're going to figure out who won the national
election. Yes, I appreciate that, but I guess I'm just talking about this notion that receipt
and casting have always been completely intertwined such that it would be inconceivable for someone
to think that the election day is the date in which the votes are cast versus the day in which they're received by elections officials. So I don't dispute that if you have two really separate elections that you can then have you having bifurcated the elections, you can bifurcate the idea of casting and receiving. I mean, you know, like obviously, but the conference Congress could have
“Congress could have had them on both the same day if that's what an election is. I mean, your”
argument is rooted in this notion that as a common sense matter, as a general matter, if we're going to have an election day, that's the day when everything is supposed to happen. And this demonstrates that whether you call it to elections or not, the casting of the votes can happen temporally separately from the receiving of the votes for the purpose of saying who won the election. That's I think pretty clear in historical records. So it seems odd to me that we are to assume that when
Congress said an election day, it necessarily precluded the states from saying in our state, we're going to consider election day to be the date of casting the votes and that we will as Mississippi has done continue to receive them up to a certain period afterwards. So I still think you're alighting with all due respect, you're alighting that there are kind of two separate elections there. And in all the states, when they elected the electors for the
president election, they cast the ballots and receive the ballots instantaneously in that state. Then there's a separate process for getting the results from the states to the national election and figuring out how it was all processed. I don't think in 1792 that could have
“happened instantaneously. I think it took a while to get from Georgia to the seat of government”
in order for that to happen. And so Congress understandably provided an interval there. But I think for the election of the electors in the states, the casting and the receipt would have been simultaneously. They might well have been doing it by putting beans in a bowl back in 17 1992. But I think as the parties agree, by about 1845, certainly by 1872, the process of voting by ballot had been well-established and those were cast and received instantaneously.
Thank you. Thank you, Council. General Sour, Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the court.
As the argument so far reflects, Mississippi's theory of election is so gener...
that an authorized statutes that Congress cannot possibly have approved in the 19th century. Defining election is merely private choice alone. With authorized statutes or the voters, mark their ballots and give them to a private party such as the valid harvester or a party operative, or even hand them in through weeks later and just say or attest that they made the decision on election day. Official receipt is at the definition of heart of election.
Every source of the 1840s onward that addresses the specific question treats official receipt
as essential to an election. Mississippi sites a few definitions that are too general to address
the question, but they cite no authorities holding that a vote can be perfected by anything other than official receipt. I welcome the court's questions. General Sour, what effect with your approach have on early voting? We agree with both sides that early voting is still acceptable and we agree in particular that Mr. Klens said that early voting has two things in favor of it,
“a distinct historical pedigree that really starts. I think as he emphasized there in those”
civil war practices that were before the 1872 Congress and also as all the courts of appeals who address this, the three cases that address this around just after 2000 after Foster all concluded
that that is what this court was referring to and talked about consummation in footnote for the court
left open. The possibility does have this better historical pedigree that there can be a process for a balance of being received earlier, but that balance has to close on election day. I'm not sure I understand exactly how that answer is responsive to the point that the election day is the voting and taking that has to be that day, so maybe I just missed it, but it seems to me, maybe you're not saying anything other than well that's different.
It's challenging question. I point that challenge is even greater for Mrs. Sephi. I mean, Judge Kleinfeld does wrestle with this in keys, so he thinks there's a really tough question
and he does come out as every court does in favor of early voting. It's a much tougher problem
conceptive for Mrs. Siphi because Mrs. Siphi's definition is it's all private action. The private action occurs when you mark that ballot and you put it in the mailbox or you get to a common carrier and of course that obviously extends over many days, so they can't handle the word day in the election statute. We think that conceptualizing it as, you know, that the court's appeals cases do as there's a process, that process is consummated. It's finalized.
It's perfected as the term that you use in the congressional record in 1844. It's perfected
“on election day the ballot box closes and we think that's the best way to address early voting.”
The general of my mind, I think the reason it's a tougher question for you is for the exact question is because you started off by phrasing the question this way. You said those election rules are not one's Congress could possibly have conceived of or approved. That's not their question. That's your question that you're saying we have to go back to the mid-19th century and say could Congress have possibly conceived of this kind of rule and Congress couldn't have conceived
of the kind of early voting we have now. It couldn't have conceived of a thousand other ways in which we in medicine elections now. And so I think it really is a problem for you, is to how you draw this line and say, well, this is across the line that all these other things that we do differently now from the way we used to do them in the 19th century. Those don't worry about. If you said to Congress, do you think that the Civil War provides a precedent for early voting
“generally among the civilian population? I think they would have laughed at you. They saw early”
voting as like something you did for soldiers in the field, not as like, oh, this is going to be great precedent for any old citizen getting her ballot three weeks ahead of time and mailing it in. I strongly agree with that in a sense that repeating what Mr. Clement said, which is that you have a practice of that involves early voting but you also have states taking, he's a curculean extraordinary effort to make sure that the ballot boxes, the votes are received and the ballot
box closes an election day, whether it's soldiers like going in the front and giving their votes over to a day jury election officials who are actually commanding officers or whether or not it's submitting them in that proxy voting practice. What happens in proxy voting? I guess you're sort of not really quite grasping, maybe it's my fault, like what my question is, it's like why this practice but no other practices. And for example, Mr. Clement was asked about verification practices,
do those two have to happen on election day, and I think Mr. Clement, credibly enough, said,
Not my case, kind of maybe they do.
statutes which don't say anything actually have some significant preempt of the fact, where we're
“going to end up? I think my answer to that is that the ordinary indicators of original public meeting”
from the 19th century, do grapple. Repeatedly, surprisingly, repeatedly grapple with a question
whether or not receipt is essential to a election. So, the way it gets fully describes it as
the essential thing in election is casting in receipts and we've cited 11 cases, you know, three, three to see as five dictionaries. Whenever they get to the point of considering whether casting and receipt are required, they unanimously, there's this impressive consensus. They all say casting and receipt. Mississippi has no 19th century source, no source at any time prior to 1918, that says a vote is passed by anything less than official receipt. So, they're actually as a surprising
consensus in the 19th century authorities that cuts an art direction. And that's reinforced by the efforts the states took during the civil war to ensure that receipt occurred on election day.
“So, you put those two together and you come with a very, you come to, I think, a very powerful”
place. I'm really surprised like powerful evidence of original public meeting on this specific discrete question, even though no one had done it yet. In all these other contexts where really, you see the 19th century authorities, they have to pair to the definition of bone, really, for example, in the Steinware case, a voter comes into the polls and he's got three votes folded together and he gets qualified and he strikes the put in the ballot box and they stop
him right there. And they say, well, that looks a little thick and they open up and there's three
and he's invited because he's trying to stuff the ballot box right there. And he says, I never voted
because it never went into the ballot box. And the courts grapple with that. They take the argument very seriously where they come down is official receipt when you've made the offer to vote and you give it to the election official, that constitutes voting. So, you have the early that the 19th century sources, looking at stuff that's very, very similar in a sense, in sets of detail of the issue presented here. And every single one of them comes out with casting and receipt
or required for voting. Yes, but since then, since then, we have many states that have departed from that to include Mississippi. And since we're talking about preemption and Congress's ability to make this determination, it just seems very odd that in the period of time since when these
statutes were passed and today, we now have pretty common practice among many states to allow
for absentee voting in this way, early voting, all these other things. But in particular, post ballot receipt, post election day, ballot receipt deadlines. And Congress has not indicated at least thus far that it intended ever to preempt this, that it intended not to have the states make this determination. As far as I know, this kind of challenge hasn't even been brought.
“This has just been accepted. So how is it that we focus in, home in, right in the 19th century?”
And that's the relevant practice that you want us to consider. And not the more recent practices, the practices of everybody understanding what election day means to include this kind of thing. Mississippi admits that every single one of those examples occurs after the relevant period when all these statutes are inactive. But I guess I'm asking you, why is that the relevant period? I mean, we have lots of statutory interpretation scenarios in which Congress passes statutes.
And I think it's rare that we interpret those statutes relative to the practices of the people who were affected by them at the time. I thought we normally do things like textualism. We look at the statute and we, some of us, you know, think about the legislative history and what Congress's intent was when we're interpreting the statute. I don't recall and maybe we have, but I'm just, you know, curious about this really heavy reliance on the 19th century understanding
of the word election day, especially when we have a more recent understanding that has been implemented and Congress hasn't said anything about it. I would say the 19th century evidence of meeting is the best evidence of the original public meaning of the statutes at the time they were adopted 1840. And you're saying that government, we have to, we have to interpret election day, notwithstanding that Congress may have wanted
states to experiment, that states have experimented and done other things we are bound, you say, by exactly what election day people thought it meant at the time these statutes were enacted. By its original public meaning and of course Congress was very concerned when it passed these statutes 1844 or 1845 and 1872 about the exact thing that Mississippi's, almost the exact thing that Mississippi would allow was just staggered about receipt deadlines. Thank you, Council.
Justice Thomas.
has to be done by election day by the official.
“You see, they're accepted. Receive. All ballots have to receive in the ballot box”
has to close on election day. The ballot box has to be at the pervert, but what we do and I know you did this tonight. I am a little upset, not a little a lot upset by many of the statements in your brief quoting historical sources at a context. But the pain street is on the law of elections, the public officers, you claim, had a traditional rule was that the legal votes duly offered at the polls, but not actually deposited in the ballot box cannot be counted.
But I look to that treatise and it says, in some of the states, that is the rule, but that in others, and also for the House US House of Representatives, the rule was the opposite. As pain wrote, it was an 1888 and established rule of the House of Representatives of the United States that a vote, duly offered and unlawfully rejected. So it wasn't accepted. At the polls, will be counted in a contest, even if not accepted by officials on election day. And we have another
source you say, the American and English and like a PDF law, you selectively quote from that statement, "sit snippet," that the quote "act of voting" was not complete until the ballot was deposited in the box. But it made very clear that that was only the rule in Alabama, while noting that other states allowed votes to be counted, even if the officer made neglect to deposit the ballot in the box until after the close of election of polls.
So it seems as if your rule is already historically destroyed at the time of these examples that you quote to us. I respectfully disagree and I stand by exactly how we characterize both those sources and all the historical sources in our brief if you go to the pain treatise, and I think we refer to this in the very next sentence in our brief, the pain treatise says the traditional rule is it's got to actually be deposited. But then it notes later in the
19th century some authorities says, "Well, you know, if they challenge your qualifications in
“and they were wrong, as long as they received it, either way it's official receipt is what matters,”
the state has it in its custody." And of course, they say, "Now you're changing the definition." Well, we've said receipt is the word that we've used, we've used that consistently, and that pain treatise points out that either way, whether it's got to actually be in the ballot box or officially received, official receipt is a central total action, and so to all three of the treaties says all five of the legal dictionaries included in the one you referred to.
Justice Kagan, Justice Goursic, Justice Cameron, Justice Barrett, Justice Jacks, thank you council, thank you. Rebottle Mr. Stewart, thank you Mr. Chief Justice, I'd like to
do my best to make three points. First, there was a concession by Mr. Clement that I was surprised
about because it seemed to be different from what he said in his brief. He said he'd have no objection in doing what the U.S. Solicitor General proposes on U of Kava. I just want to briefly make clear as we've said in our briefs that if this court agrees with the Solicitor General on U of Kava, that means they cater would be required, be it this circuit, did not allow state laws allowing U of Kava votes to arrive after election day. Second, I want to try to tie together some
points that go back to Justice Barrett's questions, Justice Kagan's questions, just a set of my own questions, some other questions about 19th century history here. My friend, Mr. Clement, emphasized the Solicitor General did as well, "Hey, you know, those show that you need a val receipt."
“I think the key point to recognize there is that valet receipt was not possible in the 19th”
century without somebody showing up in person and undergoing and on the spot qualifications check.
If you need valet receipt, you need those other things as well and that's quite critical
to the plain meaning in this case. I think the better view is that, "Hey, when people were holding elections in person at the time, naturally they were going to be receiving valet's on election day. That doesn't mean that that was required or baked into an election any more than in-person voting or on the spot qualification checks by fellow voters is baked into an election." I would add, Justice Sotomayor, you mentioned some things, pain, treatise and otherwise.
I would also say, if you look at the Solicitor General's sources, they emphasize not just voter choice, but they also emphasize that at the time the method of making that choice was in person on the spot qualification checks, those kind of things. Those are not things you really see quoted or cited in the Solicitor General's brief, but they bear out what we've said about Mr. Clements 19th century election codes. I'd say that also this history explains the civil war
receipt of absentee ballots. Mr. Clement alluded to the idea that states went to Herculean efforts to receive valet's on election day. That's not what they went to Herculean efforts to do.
They went to Herculean efforts to hold elections effectively in person becaus...
voting that people used at the time. That's why a field voting was so dominant and the other
thing that states were trying to do at the time was to adhere to actual or perceived in-person
“in-district voting requirements. That's what they were doing. They were holding elections where”
people would cast ballots in person, which was the common standard way. And when that's happening,
yes, naturally ballots are going to be received by election day. That did not make it a right
issue or a settled issue. It did not decouple ballot receipt from ballot casting, but it did not perclose that either. Last thing, I just want to refer to your neighbor again, just as course it's, you know, I want to be clear, you know, we have not made any, you know, the argument for the neighbor to be allowed to cast ballots, but I will say that I would emphasize my friends do allow
“the neighbor to cast your ballot. The neighbor just needs to be designated, I think, as Mr.”
Clement put it cloaked with government authority. You know, it's quite something for a neighbor, a party boss, you know, some of that actor to be able to become a ballot receiver just because they're cloaked with state authority. I mean, if that's allowed, then I don't see why the historically recognized for a hundred years method of casting about it through the mail would not be equally legitimate, especially when the federal government itself is perfectly fine with that
method and Congress has been fine with that method for United States tax returns, which, like
“to carry huge civil and criminal consequence, also have our very critical on deadlines. I think the”
best way to resolve this case is to come back to the text, history and precedent, which we've
said many times, just does not decide the key issue. This is ultimately a federalism case.
The question is whether, I think Justice Jackson put it, did Congress in 1845 block states from adopting a practice that no one had wide reason to consider at the time. Congress wasn't thinking about it, it didn't decide that it didn't, it didn't wall states off from doing that. We ask the court to reverse. Thank you. Thank you, Council. The case is submitted.

