RITE Requests Court Resolve Constitutional Questions Before Ballots Are Cast in February
WASHINGTON, DC – A RITE-backed coalition is requesting a ruling from a New York court in Stefanik v. Hochul before the upcoming special election for George Santos’s vacant seat in the 3rd Congressional District. RITE’s Derek Lyons says unanswered constitutional questions surrounding New York’s new mail-voting law could cast doubt on the election results.
In a letter to the court, counsel warns,
“[A]n important and high-profile special election will occur sometime in February of 2024. The Mail-Voting Law that is the subject of this litigation is applicable to all elections on or after January 1, 2024.
Because this election is rapidly approaching, and under the Mail-Voting Law mail-voting ballot applications must be provided in advance and ballots must be mailed to applicants “as soon as practicable,” N.Y. Election Law § 8-704, it is all the more important that a decision on the pending motion for preliminary injunction is issued as soon as possible.”
RITE’s CEO and President Derek Lyons added,
“Results will have a massive asterisk if Long Island voters cast their ballots under an illegal system. It’s vital for every state, not just New York, to resolve election law disputes before voting begins.”
The RITE-backed coalition sued New York’s governor in October, arguing the state constitution prohibits the state from implementing no-excuse absentee voting. New York’s constitution has long limited absentee voting to those individuals unable to vote in person due to travel or physical limitations. Less than two years ago, New Yorkers voted in a statewide constitutional referendum to keep it that way.
RITE has helped organize a coalition of voters, election officials, candidates, and national and New York-based political committees to challenge New York Democrats’ unconstitutional expansion of the state’s absentee voting law, which Governor Kathy Hochul signed into law in September.
The Early Mail Voter Act discards that choice in favor of a no-excuse absentee balloting regime in defiance of the constitution and the express will of the people.
Read more about Stefanik v. Hochul at RITEUSA.org.