Federal Judge Orders USPS To Stop Sending 'Patently False' Mailers To Voters, 'Will Sow Confusion'
'Federal judge orders USPS to stop sending patently false mailers to voters that will sow confusion. Jake Johnson, Common Dreams, Sept. 13, 2020. Alternet. - Excerpts, Ed:
- Airman 1st Class Austin Wells, 100th Force Support Squadron military postal clerk, shelves a basket of mail inside the post office at RAF Mildenhall, England, May 19, 2020. The post office has extended holding times for packages due to Covid-19. (US AF Photo).
A federal judge late Saturday ordered the U.S. Postal Service to immediately stop sending mailers containing false voting information to Colorado residents, saying he is deeply troubled by the decision to distribute the misleading postcards to households across the nation.
As a result of false information contained in the notice, some Colorado voters may not vote because they erroneously believe that: (1) they must request a ballot at least 15 days before the election; (2) they must mail their ballot at least seven days prior to the election; or (3) they may not vote if they lose their ballot, wrote U.S. District Court Judge William Martínez in a 10-page ruling (pdf) granting Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswolds request for a temporary restraining order.
In reality, Colorado voters do not need to request a ballot at any time. Voters who receive a ballot do not need to mail the ballot back at least seven days before the election; they may alternatively deposit that ballot at a drop-box or may choose to vote in person up to and including on Election Day, Martínez continued, describing some of the information on the mailer patently false.
The notice, if distributed, will sow confusion amongst voters by delivering a contradictory message, the judge said.
The ruling came hours after Griswold sued Postmaster General Louis DeJoya Republican megadonor to President Donald Trumpand other top USPS officials over the mailers, which have already arrived at households in Colorado and other states just weeks ahead of the November election. While acknowledging the postcards may have started off as a well-intentioned effort to inform voters ahead of the election, Griswold tweeted late Friday that confusing voters about mail ballots in the middle of a pandemic is unacceptable...
Election officials in California, Washington state, & Maryland have also publicly raised alarm about the postcards, which contain both broad advice on how to vote by mail as well as specific timelines that could mislead residents of states with different rules...
More, https://www.alternet.org/2020/09/federal-judge-orders-usps-to-stop-sending-patently-false-mailers-to-voters-that-will-sow-confusion/
No Vested Interest
(5,164 posts)Mine came Friday - in Ohio.