The Supreme Court delivered a surprising 5-4 decision on Monday that preserves state laws allowing mail-in ballots received after Election Day to be counted, as long as they were postmarked by the deadline. Justice Amy Coney Barrett authored the majority opinion, siding with Chief Justice John Roberts and the three liberal justices—Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson—against a challenge from the Republican National Committee and Mississippi GOP interests.
This ruling in Watson v. Republican National Committee upholds Mississippi’s law permitting ballots postmarked on or before Election Day to arrive up to five business days later. The decision carries implications far beyond the Magnolia State, potentially shielding similar grace periods in roughly a dozen other states from federal preemption challenges. While framed as a narrow statutory interpretation, the outcome underscores ongoing tensions over election administration in an era of expanded mail voting.
Critics of expansive mail-in procedures have long warned that extending the receipt window invites uncertainty, delays in results, and opportunities for fraud or manipulation. Federal law, dating back to the 1840s, designates the Tuesday after the first Monday in November as Election Day for presidential and congressional races. Challengers argued this requires ballots not merely to be cast but received by that date, preserving the integrity of a single, uniform Election Day as Congress intended.
During March oral arguments, several conservative justices expressed skepticism toward Mississippi’s position. Concerns included hypothetical ballot recalls, third-party handling of ballots, and the risk that post-Election Day arrivals could erode public confidence when outcomes hang in the balance.
Justice Barrett herself probed these practical vulnerabilities. Yet in the end, her written opinion for the majority prioritized a different reading of the statutes, one that defers more to state flexibility in implementing federal election timelines.
Justice Samuel Alito dissented, joined fully by Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch, and in part by Justice Brett Kavanaugh. The dissent emphasized the historical understanding of Election Day as the point when voting concludes, warning that grace periods blur this bright line and complicate the finality essential to free and fair elections.
For those committed to electoral security, this outcome represents a missed opportunity. Mail voting expanded dramatically during the 2020 cycle amid the pandemic, bringing with it documented issues of lost ballots, signature mismatches, and unverifiable chains of custody. Extending receipt deadlines compounds these risks, particularly in tight races where late-arriving ballots can swing results after initial counts suggest one winner.
The public’s trust in elections—already strained—depends on clear rules applied uniformly and transparently, not on judicial deference to state experiments that stretch federal deadlines.
States retain significant authority over election mechanics, a principle rooted in the Constitution. Yet when federal statutes establish a national Election Day, that framework should guide rather than yield to every procedural variation.
The majority’s approach risks normalizing a system where “Election Day” becomes an elastic window, vulnerable to the very delays and disputes that have fueled skepticism in recent cycles. Conservatives have rightly pushed for reforms like voter ID, same-day registration limits, and strict mail ballot safeguards precisely to counter these vulnerabilities.
As America heads into another consequential election season, this ruling highlights the limits of relying solely on the courts to secure our republic’s most fundamental process. Legislatures must act where possible to tighten standards, Congress retains the power to clarify federal law, and citizens must demand accountability from officials at every level. Election integrity is not a partisan luxury but a constitutional imperative.
John Thune and the Senate must pass the SAVE America Act.
The fight for elections that reflect the will of the people, expressed clearly and counted promptly, continues. This decision may close one legal avenue, but it opens renewed urgency for legislative and state-level action to safeguard the process that underpins self-government.










