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Wisconsin's Supreme Court on Friday ruled that absentee ballot drop boxes are illegal under state law, delivering a win for conservatives challenging the Wisconsin Elections Commission and a blow to state Democrats.
"An absentee ballot must be returned by mail or the voter must personally deliver it to the municipal clerk at the clerks' office or a designated alternate site," the court said in Friday's opinion. The court did not address whether an absentee voter must personally mail the ballot or whether a third party can do so on the voter's behalf.
The court's 4-3 decision is a win for Republicans and the conservative Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty, a legal group that had challenged guidance the elections commission issued in 2020 instructing election clerks to encourage the use of absentee ballot drop boxes for the presidential election.
The decision means that absentee drop boxes cannot be used for the Aug. 9 primary election and this November's midterm election. It also has important consequences for the 2024 presidential election. President Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump by fewer than 21,000 votes in the 2020 election, and Wisconsin will be a critical battleground state in a potential rematch.
Absentee and mail-in voting were widespread during the 2020 presidential election because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Battleground states like Wisconsin controversially rushed to adopt new election rules to accommodate pandemic restrictions, including the use of drop boxes for voters to return mail ballots.
In 2020, the Wisconsin Elections Commission issued memos to election clerks in March and August, instructing them that absentee ballots did not need to be mailed or delivered in person by a voter to the municipal clerk but could instead be placed in a drop box. The commission said those drop boxes could be unstaffed, temporary, or permanent.
Democrats, who historically have held an advantage among voters who mail in ballots, welcomed the rule changes, while Republicans objected that widespread mail-in voting could make it easier to commit fraud.
"While the question of whether an agent may mail an absentee ballot remains open, Wisconsin voters can have confidence that state law, not guidance from the Wisconsin Elections Commission, has the final word on how Wisconsin elections are conducted,” he said.