- July 1, 2026
- Updated 1:19 am
U.S. Postal Service Proposal Sparks Debate Over Mail Ballots
- 11 Views
- admin
- June 11, 2026
- Election Coverage Politics
The U.S. Postal Service has put forward a controversial new rule related to mail-in voting, causing significant concern among Democrats and voting-rights advocates. The proposed rule suggests that the Postal Service might refuse to deliver mail ballots in states that do not provide voter rolls to the federal government.
This rule, although vaguely worded, appears to grant the Postal Service broad power to intervene in the mail voting system. It requires states to create lists of mail voters for Postal Service employees to use when determining ballot eligibility. States that choose not to comply may face refusals in mail ballot delivery.
Democrats and voting-rights groups argue that this proposal is an unconstitutional federal incursion into state-managed election processes. They emphasize that withholding mail services in states dependent on mail balloting might impact millions of voters, the majority of whom are expected to be Democrats. This is due to a perception among Republicans, fueled by former President Trump’s claims, that mail voting is unreliable and susceptible to fraud.
The process of screening mail ballots for eligibility represents an unprecedented level of federal involvement in state elections. However, the ambiguities in the proposed rule leave open questions about the practical execution of this screening.
In a recent court hearing in Boston, Democratic state attorneys general, along with several voting rights groups, claimed the rule imposes federal overreach. They pointed out the constitutional provision that election processes are state-controlled. The proposal also poses logistical challenges, they argued, making it costly and complex to create new voter lists or modify ballot designs, with less than 150 days to the 2026 general election.
“It’s just difficult to overstate the disruption that this will cause to election administration,”said Michael Cohen, deputy attorney general in California, during a federal court discussion representing multiple states.
Recent Posts
- Supreme Court Decision on Transgender Athletes Generates State-Level Actions
- Representative Thomas Kean Jr. Hospitalized for Depression
- Mbappe Breaks World Cup Record as France Defeats Sweden
- Majority of Americans Feel President Trump Ignores Critical Issues, Poll Reveals
- New Jersey Congressman Kean Addresses Absence in Congress