The Virginia Board of Elections rule allowing officials to count ballots that arrived without a postmark up to three days after the election was illegal, a state judge ruled.
Virginia Circuit Court Judge William Eldridge ruled the state’s late mail-in ballot law violated state statute and permanently banned the law in future Virginia elections, the Public Interest Legal Foundation announced Monday.
The Public Interest Legal Foundation sued the state’s board of elections in October on behalf of Thomas Reed, a Frederick County, Virginia, election official.
“This is a big win for the Rule of Law,” J. Christian Adams, Public Interest Legal Foundation president and general counsel, said in a statement. “This consent decree gives Mr. Reed everything he requested—a permanent ban on accepting ballots without postmarks after Election Day and is a loss for the Virginia bureaucrats who said ballots could come in without these protections.”
The board of elections proposed the rule during an Aug. 4 meeting and related guidance was sent to election officials statewide on Aug. 13 informing them of the change. The Public Interest Legal Foundation sued on behalf of Reed on Oct. 9, according to a news release.
On Oct. 28, one week before the Nov. 3 federal elections, Eldridge blocked the law due to The Public Interest Legal Foundation lawsuit. Virginia was therefore prevented from counting late ballots without postmarks, Public Interest Legal Foundation spokesperson Logan Churchwell told The Daily Caller News Foundation.
“Mr. Reed has a straightforward request. Follow the law,” Adams said after the Public Interest Legal Foundation filed the lawsuit.
Eldridge ruled that existing Virginia state law prohibited ballots without postmarks from being counted, according to a consent decree he signed.
Existing law says that “any absentee ballot returned to the general registrar after the closing of the polls on Election Day but before noon on the third day after the election and postmarked on or before the date of the election shall be counted.”
The court ruling will affect the upcoming November 2021 Virginia gubernatorial and House of Delegates elections.
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