FiveThirtyEight
Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux

Courts Deliver A Blow In The Fight Over Drive-Through Voting In Texas

On Monday afternoon, a federal district court judge in Texas dismissed an effort by Republicans in the state to throw out about 127,000 ballots in Harris County cast via drive-through voting. The judge, Andrew Hanen, ruled that the group of activists and candidates who brought the case don’t have standing to sue. But the Republican-appointed judge also seemed irritated by the fact that they waited so long to bring the complaint before the court, asking the plaintiffs, “Why am I just getting this case?” He noted, too, that even if the plaintiffs had cleared the bar for standing, he still wouldn’t have granted the injunction for ballots already cast, although he did say that he would block Harris County from offering drive-through voting on Election Day. (Again, this is all hypothetical since he ruled that the plaintiffs don’t have standing.)

Hanen did order the county to maintain all drive-through voting records and data in case his ruling is reversed by a higher court — so it’s possible we haven’t heard the last of this. But the Texas Supreme Court rejected a similar case from the same plaintiffs yesterday. Now that Hanen, who’s known as an especially conservative judge, also ruled against the GOP plaintiffs, things are not looking good for this election saga.

Nathaniel Rakich

Pennsylvania is probably the single most important state in the presidential race this year, and because election workers aren’t allowed to start processing mail ballots until Tuesday morning, it will probably take a few days to report all of its results. Adding to the potential chaos, counties aren’t actually required to count mail ballots on Tuesday — just strongly encouraged to do so.

That’s why this map from the Pennsylvania Capital-Star is so useful:

It shows when each county plans to start counting mail-in ballots, how well equipped they are to count quickly and how many they have to get through before they’re done. This is also important because the counties that don’t plan to start counting mail-in votes until Wednesday will almost certainly have too-good-to-be-true results for Trump on Nov. 3.

Kaleigh Rogers

Beginning today in Michigan, election officials in some cities will be able to start processing absentee ballots. The new law passed last month allows officials in cities with at least 25,000 people to begin getting absentee ballots ready to count, sorting them and opening outer envelopes. But they can’t start counting until tomorrow, and can only process today from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. Previously, officials had to wait until Election Day to start processing absentee ballots. Still, even with a small head start, Michigan’s secretary of state estimated that it could take until Friday for all the ballots to be counted.


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