By Douglas V. Gibbs
As the Supreme Court prepares to rule in Watson v. Republican National Committee, most Americans see just another legal battle over election rules. What they’re missing is a profound constitutional moment that strikes at the very heart of our federal system and the integrity of our elections.
At stake is whether states like Mississippi and California can continue counting mail-in ballots that arrive days after Election Day, effectively transforming a single decisive day into weeks of uncertainty. The answer lies not in clever legal arguments or policy preferences, but in the constitutional design our Founders created to prevent precisely this kind of electoral chaos.
I learned this lesson firsthand in 1984 while serving in the U.S. Navy at Naval Air Station Meridian, Mississippi. As a California resident voting absentee, I had to apply for my ballot. No mass mailings. No automatic distribution. The instructions were clear: mail it early enough to arrive by Election Day, or it wouldn’t count. This wasn’t voter suppression; it was common sense election administration that protected both access and integrity.
Today’s California bears no resemblance to that era. Now, ballots are mailed to everyone, with a seven-day grace period for those postmarked by Election Day. This transformation didn’t happen through constitutional amendment or congressional authorization – it happened through state administrative fiat that directly conflicts with federal law.
One of the most heated debates at the 1787 Constitutional Convention was whether the federal legislature should be able to “negative” (veto) state laws. The delegates repeatedly rejected this broad power, fearing an overbearing federal government. Yet they made one crucial exception: in Article I, Section 4, while they granted the States the authority to prescribe the “Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives,” the also authorized Congress the authority to “by Law make or alter such Regulations.”
Why this exception? Because the Founders knew that states might abuse their election administration privileges to manipulate federal elections. They anticipated exactly what we’re seeing today – states creating rules that give advantage to some voters over others, that extend elections beyond their intended conclusion, and that sow doubt and confusion into the electoral process.
The federal Election Day statutes weren’t written in a vacuum. They exist because states historically abused their election administration authority, prompting Congress to establish clear, uniform standards. Like warning labels on products, these laws exist because bad behavior and corruption made them necessary.
The Constitution establishes a clear hierarchy when it comes to constitutional authorized powers: Article I, Section 4 gives Congress authority over federal elections; Article VI makes federal laws the “supreme Law of the Land.” When Congress established a uniform Election Day, it exercised its constitutional authority, and states must comply – not because the courts say so, but because the Constitution says so.
The question in Watson v. RNC isn’t complicated: Does “the day for the election” mean ballots must be both cast and received by that day, or merely cast by that day? The historical context and congressional intent are clear: Election Day was meant to be a single, decisive moment when Americans choose their representatives, not the beginning of a weeks-long counting period.
The proper role of the Court here isn’t to create new law or expand federal power but to recognize constitutional reality. When the Supreme Court rules (as expected) against Mississippi’s grace period, it won’t be making new policy. It will be acknowledging that Congress already exercised its constitutionally enumerated power to establish uniform election timing.
This approach avoids the constitutional problems of judicial review that has allowed federal power to expand beyond its proper limits. The Court would simply be performing its legitimate function: recognizing that federal law, not state law, governs federal elections.
Today’s debate about “voter suppression” versus “voter responsibility” reflects a deeper cultural shift away from civic virtue. Expecting voters to ensure their ballots arrive on time isn’t suppression. It’s responsible participation in our electoral processes. The Founders would have viewed such requirements as consistent with republican self-government.
We’ve become so intent on rewarding irresponsibility that we’ve forgotten basic truths: if you don’t want your vote compromised, don’t put yourself in a position where it might be. Strict Election Day deadlines, absentee ballots only for those who request them, precinct-based counting, and voter ID aren’t unreasonable. They’re common-sense measures that protect everyone’s vote by protecting the integrity of the entire system.
A Supreme Court ruling aligned with the Constitution and Election Day deadlines as established by federal law would be a step toward restoring constitutional balance. But it’s only one step. True election integrity requires returning to the principles our Founders established: federal standards for federal elections, state administration within those bounds, and civic responsibility from voters.
The stability of self-government demands processes that are transparent, timely, and trustworthy. Prolonged ballot counting undermines this, inviting the very doubts that weaken our republic. “The day for the election” carries a precision that grace periods blur, turning a singular civic moment into an ambiguous process open to contestation.
Whatever the outcome in Watson v. RNC, the case offers an opportunity to reaffirm foundational election principles. Americans deserve elections resolved on Election Day itself, preserving the solemnity and certainty that undergird our constitutional republic.
The Founders gave us the tools to prevent election chaos. It’s time we used them again.
— Political Pistachio Conservative News and Commentary
