The Supreme Court has blocked an order that extended the deadline for submitting absentee votes hours before Wisconsin’s primary.
The court also wrote that the district court’s decision to allow voters additional days to cast their votes “fundamentally alters the nature of the election.”
The state Republican-controlled legislature and the Republican National Committee then filed an appeal at the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, which restored the witness certification requirement but kept the extension on the deadline for submitting absentee ballots through April 13.
The Republicans then asked the Supreme Court on April 4 to block the lower court’s decision to grant the 6-day extension to the voting deadline for absentee ballots in an emergency request for a stay.
In Monday’s decision, the Supreme Court called the district court’s decision “unusual,” saying that by allowing an extension for absentee voting, the district court had to issue a subsequent order to block the public release of any election results for six days after election day.
“It is highly questionable, moreover, that this attempt to suppress disclosure of the election results for six days after election day would work,” the court wrote. “And if any information were released during that time, that would gravely affect the integrity of the election process.”
The courts’ four liberal judges—Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan—dissented.
Ginsburg, who penned the dissent, said that the extension allows Wisconsin voters to vote safely during the pandemic and that “the concerns advanced by the Court and the applicants pale in comparison to the risk that tens of thousands of voters will be disenfranchised.”
“Ensuring an opportunity for the people of Wisconsin to exercise their votes should be our paramount concern,” she wrote.
The state Supreme Court ruled 4-2 on Monday saying that Evers lacked the authority to move the election on his own.