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Monday, October 12, 2020

Federal judge upholds Minnesota absentee ballot extension

A federal judge Sunday night upheld an agreement that extends Minnesota’s absentee ballot counting deadline by seven days, dealing a blow to Republicans, the Associated Press reported on Monday.

In Minnesota, ballots traditionally need to be in by 8 p.m. on Election Day. With the new ruling, ballots postmarked on or before Election Day may still be counted as long as they are received within the seven-day period.

The extension was initially granted by Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon (D) in state court amid mounting concerns over voter safety during the coronavirus pandemic.

“I am committed to protecting and strengthening the security and fairness of our elections process,” Simon said in a statement.

State Rep. Eric Lucero (R) and Ramsey County GOP activist James Carson called on U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel, a Trump appointee, to rule that the extension was a violation of federal law, which establishes Nov. 3 as the 2020 election date, according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

Under Brasel's ruling, the seven-day extension will remain in place.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Prepare yourself the marxist attempt to steal this election is real..

Anonymous said...

Yes! Another defeat for voter suppression!

Anonymous said...

This is exactly what Any Coney Barrett meant in her opening statement. Why can't these judge's just enforce THE LAW???