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Trump campaign sues to block postal vote rule changes in North Carolina
28 September 2020, 13:34
North Carolina is among the swing states that could determine the result of November’s US presidential election.
US President Donald Trump’s campaign committee are trying to block North Carolina election officials from enforcing rule changes that could boost the number of ballots counted in the battleground state.
The Republican National Committee has filed a lawsuit which claims a new system adopted by the State Board of Elections will allow for postal votes to be cast late and without proper witness verification, “which invites fraud, coercion, theft, and otherwise illegitimate voting”.
The elections board has issued new guidance allowing posted absentee ballots with deficient information to be fixed without forcing the voter to fill in a new blank ballot for November’s general election.
The change means absentee voters who do not provide complete information on their envelope about a witness who saw them fill in the ballot will not have to complete a new ballot and locate another witness. A voter will just have to turn in an affidavit confirming they filled in the original ballot.
North Carolina is one of eight states with witness and or notary public requirements for absentee ballots, according to the Brennan Centre for Justice.
North Carolina General Assembly leaders announced they had also filed a similar lawsuit in federal court against board members. They asked a judge to block enforcement of the board’s absentee ballot alterations, which they contend would wrest away from the legislature its constitutional job to set the rules for federal elections.
The national Republicans’ federal lawsuit claims the state elections board made a partisan “backroom deal” that undermines state legislators’ “carefully-considered, balanced structure of election laws”. The suit claims the board’s guidance usurps a law that says a ballot may only be accepted if it has a witness signature on it.
“While touted as allowing greater access to voters during the current pandemic – an objective already addressed in recent months by the General Assembly – the actual effect is to undermine protections that help ensure the upcoming election will be not only safe and accessible but secure, fair, and credible,” the suit says.
The lawsuit filed by the Trump campaign and the RNC also accuses the board of trying to override state law in saying that ballots postmarked on or before election day can be counted if they are received within nine days of the election instead of the three days prescribed by law.
The state elections board and its chairman, Damon Circosta, are among the defendants named in the lawsuit. The plaintiffs also include two Republican congressmen from North Carolina, Greg Murphy and Dan Bishop.
North Carolina and other states expect a major surge in postal voting for the November 3 election amid the Covid-19 pandemic. More than 1 million voters in North Carolina have already requested an absentee ballot as of September 24 and that nearly 240,000 completed ballots had already been returned, the lawsuit says.
Issues with deficient witness information on postal votes have disproportionately affected black voters. Black residents account for 16% of overall ballots returned, yet their ballots account for about 43% of those classified as having incomplete witness information, according to state elections data.