2026-06-29T10:04:00-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
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更新于:2026年6月29日 / 美国东部时间上午11:59 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
华盛顿讯——美国最高法院周一裁定,各州可以统计在选举日当天寄出但后续送达的邮寄选票,驳回了共和党对密西西比州延迟送达选票相关法律的挑战。
在这起被称为“沃森诉共和党全国委员会”的备受关注的选举争议案中,最高法院以5比4的投票结果认定,密西西比州的相关法律并未与将选举日定为每年11月第一个周一之后的周二的联邦法律相冲突。
艾米·科尼·巴雷特大法官撰写了多数派意见,首席大法官约翰·罗伯茨以及三名自由派大法官加入了该意见,支持密西西比州的法律。
“建国元勋们意识到,制定‘适用于国家形势下每一种可能变化’的选举法难度极大。”巴雷特写道,“因此,他们没有将选举法宪法化,而是决定将‘选举自由裁量权’‘交由某处行使’。”“只需说明一点:这项权力并未交由本院掌握。选举日相关法律并未提及选票接收事宜,我们不能补充国会选定的法条内容。”
距离11月中期选举仅剩数月,这起案件可能颠覆全美十多个州的类似法律——这些州允许统计在选举日前盖戳但在选举日后送达的邮寄选票。
巴雷特在多数派意见中表示,联邦选举法律要求选民在选举日当天做出投票选择,只要该日期是投票截止日期,密西西比州的情况正是如此。
“但选举日相关法律并未设定选票接收截止日期,因此它们并未阻止密西西比州统计在选举日前盖戳但之后送达的选票。”她说道。
特朗普总统经常批评邮寄投票,在没有证据的情况下声称这会导致选举欺诈,并且他曾试图单方面限制这一投票方式。他的政府支持共和党全国委员会对密西西比州法律提起的诉讼,辩称选举日就是票箱关闭的日期,选举官员必须在当日收齐所有选票。
针对最高法院的裁决,特朗普敦促国会通过一项名为《拯救美国法案》的立法。该法案将实施严格的投票规则,包括取消邮寄选票(少数例外情况),并设定选民身份认证和公民身份证明要求。
“无论是政客还是其他人,都没有理由反对上述三项要求。”他在Truth Social的帖子中写道。
密西西比州总检察长林恩·菲奇是共和党人,她呼吁州议员取消邮寄选票的选举后送达截止期限。
“随着联邦制这一基本宪法原则得到确认,我希望密西西比州立法机构能借此机会修改法律,要求缺席选票在与选民在投票站投票当日被接收。”她在一份声明中说道,“特朗普总统优先提升公众对我们选举的信任度,这一观点是正确的。”
全美50个州均要求选票在选举当日完成标记并提交。但在14个州和哥伦比亚特区,选举官员会接收并统计在选举日前盖戳但在选举日后送达的邮寄选票。另有29个州和华盛顿特区允许至少部分军人和海外选民的选票在选举日后送达。
此次案件涉及的密西西比州法律规定,只要选票在选举日前盖戳,在选举日后5天内送达的都将被计入统计。
这起案件是最高法院本届任期内审理的四起选举相关案件之一。今年1月,最高法院恢复了一名共和党国会议员提起的诉讼,该诉讼挑战伊利诺伊州统计延迟送达选票的法律,不过法院的裁决属于程序性裁定。最高法院的保守派多数派还削弱了《投票权法案》的一项关键条款,在初选季拉开帷幕之际,引发了南部部分州的重新划分选区热潮。
最高法院目前还在审理一起重要的竞选资金案件,涉及联邦对政治委员会与候选人协调支出金额上限的合法性问题。
这起针对密西西比州法律的争议可追溯至2024年,当时共和党全国委员会和密西西比州自由党提起诉讼,挑战选票接收截止期限。这些政党辩称,19世纪制定的联邦法律为总统和国会选举设定了统一的选举日,要求选票必须在当日收齐。他们表示,密西西比州的宽限期与这些法律相冲突。
美国地区法院维持了密西西比州延迟送达选票的5天宽限期,但美国第五巡回上诉法院认定联邦法律优先于该州法律。最高法院周一的裁决推翻了这一判决。
Supreme Court says states can count mail ballots that arrive after Election Day
2026-06-29T10:04:00-0400 / CBS News
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Updated on: June 29, 2026 / 11:59 AM EDT / CBS News
Washington — The Supreme Court on Monday ruled that states can count mail ballots that are cast by Election Day but arrive later, rejecting a GOP challenge to Mississippi law’s for late-arriving ballots.
In the closely watched election dispute known as Watson v. Republican National Committee, the high court split 5 to 4 in finding that Mississippi’s measure does not conflict with federal statutes that set Election Day as the Tuesday after the first Monday in November in certain years.
Justice Amy Coney Barrett authored the majority opinion, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and the three liberal justices to uphold Mississippi’s law.
“The Framers recognized the difficulty of crafting election laws ‘applicable to every probable change in the situation of the country.’ So instead of constitutionalizing election law, they decided that ‘a discretionary power over elections’ needed to be lodged ‘somewhere,’” Barrett wrote. “Suffice it to say, that power was not lodged in this Court. The election-day statutes say nothing about ballot receipt, and we cannot add to the words Congress chose.”
With the November midterm elections just months away, the case threatened to upend similar laws in more than a dozen states that allow ballots that are postmarked by, but arrive after, Election Day to be tallied.
Barrett wrote for the majority that federal election laws require voters to make their choice on Election Day, which happens as long as that is the deadline for voting, like it is in Mississippi.
“But the election-day statutes do not set a deadline for ballot receipt, so they do not prevent Mississippi from counting ballots postmarked before election day yet received afterward,” she said.
President Trump frequently criticizes mail voting, claiming without evidence that it leads to election fraud, and he has attempted to unilaterally curtail the practice. His administration backed the challenge to Mississippi’s law brought by the RNC, arguing that Election Day is the day the ballot box closes, and when election officials must have all ballots.
In response to the Supreme Court’s decision, Mr. Trump urged Congress to pass legislation called the SAVE America Act. The bill would impose stringent voting rules, including eliminating mail ballots, with some exceptions, and set voter ID and proof-of-citizenship requirements.
“There is no excuse for a politician, or otherwise, to be against the above three requirements,” he wrote in a Truth Social post.
Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch, a Republican, urged state lawmakers to eliminate the post-Election Day deadline for mail ballots.
“With the bedrock constitutional principle of federalism now affirmed, I am hopeful that the Mississippi Legislature will take this opportunity to amend the law and require absentee ballots be received on the same day ballots are cast at the polling place,” she said in a statement. “President Trump is right to prioritize improving public trust in our elections.”
All 50 states require ballots to be marked and submitted by the day of the election. But in 14 states and the District of Columbia, election officials will accept and count mail ballots that are postmarked by Election Day but received after that day. Twenty-nine states and D.C. allow at least some military and overseas ballots to be received after Election Day.
Under the Mississippi law at issue in the case, ballots received up to five days after the election are tallied so long as they were postmarked by Election Day.
The case is one of four involving elections that the Supreme Court heard in its current term. In January, the court revived a Republican congressman’s lawsuit that challenged Illinois’ law for counting late-arriving ballots, though its decision was procedural. The Supreme Court’s conservative majority also weakened a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, setting off a redistricting scramble in some Southern states just as primary season got underway.
The high court is also weighing a significant campaign finance case involving the legality of federal caps on the amount of money a political committee can spend in coordination with a candidate.
The dispute over Mississippi’s law dates back to 2024, when the Republican National Committee and Mississippi’s Libertarian Party filed lawsuits challenging the ballot-receipt deadline. The parties argued that federal statutes enacted in the 1800s, which set a uniform day for the election for president and Congress, require ballots to be received by the day. Mississippi’s grace period, they said, was in conflict with those laws.
A U.S. district court upheld Mississippi’s five-day deadline for late-arriving ballots, but the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit found that federal law preempts the state’s law. The Supreme Court’s ruling Monday reversed that decision.
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