SCOTUS Seems Skeptical Of Allowing Ballots to Be Counted Days After Elections
A majority of justices on the Supreme Court of the United States appeared wary of state laws allowing ballots to be counted days—or even weeks—after Election Day, raising serious constitutional questions during recent oral arguments.
At the center of the debate is the meaning of “Election Day” itself, with several conservative justices suggesting the Constitution and federal law point to a single, definitive day for voting—not an extended counting period.
Justice Samuel Alito delivered one of the most pointed remarks:
“Independence DAY, birthDAY, and Election DAY. They are all particular DAYS. So if we start with that, if I have nothing more to look at than the phrase ‘Election Day,’ I think this is the DAY in which everything is going to take place.”
That interpretation resonated with constitutional originalists on the bench, who have long argued that extending ballot deadlines risks undermining election integrity.
However, liberal justices pushed back. Justice Elena Kagan countered that such a strict reading could also call early voting into question—an argument conservatives rejected as a mischaracterization of the case.
The lawsuit, brought by the Republican National Committee, specifically targets Mississippi’s five-day grace period for receiving mail-in ballots that are postmarked by Election Day but arrive afterward.
Concerns about election confidence were also front and center. Justice Brett Kavanaugh warned that delayed vote counting could fuel public distrust, stating:
“‘The longer after Election Day any significant changes in vote totals take place, the greater the risk that the losing side will cry the election has been stolen,’” Kavanaugh said as he quoted from an analysis by a New York University law professor.
Fox News added that 29 states have some form of a grace period to receive ballots after polls close on Election Day.
The case reaches the Supreme Court amid a broader national debate over mail-in voting.
Last year, four Republican-led states eliminated ballot receipt grace periods, and lawmakers in Congress are considering proposals that would further restrict voting by mail, Stateline noted.
The discussion comes as the Senate debates election legislation backed by Donald Trump that would impose new nationwide voting requirements. The measure, known as the SAVE Act, faces long odds in the Senate due to the filibuster.
Paul Clement, representing the Republican National Committee, argued that the possibility of election outcomes changing due to ballots received after Election Day would be unacceptable to losing candidates.
Following the 2020 election, Donald Trump called on election officials not to count ballots that arrived after Election Day, though several states continued processing such ballots in accordance with their laws.
“If you have an election and the election is going to turn on late-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,” Clement told the justices.
Mississippi Secretary of State Michael Watson, a Republican defending the state’s law, argues that federal statutes permit ballots cast by Election Day to be received and counted afterward. In court filings, attorneys for Watson contend that both legal and historical precedent support that interpretation, maintaining that states can determine ballots are finalized when submitted rather than when they are received.
During arguments on Monday, the justices appeared divided along ideological lines. Conservative members of the court expressed skepticism toward ballot receipt grace periods, while liberal justices were more receptive to the state’s position. Conservatives currently hold a 6–3 majority on the Supreme Court.
“It seems to me that we have a very long history of states having a variety of different ballot receipt deadlines, to include after Election Day,” said Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, one of the court’s liberal members.
Mississippi Solicitor General Scott Stewart informed the court that the dispute centers on whether a law enacted by Congress in 1845 prohibited states from counting ballots that were cast by Election Day but submitted afterward. “No one challenged it until now,” Stewart said.