ROCKVILLE—On Friday, the Montgomery County Circuit Court will decide whether to allow Maryland poll workers to begin counting mail-in ballots for the November 8 election early.

Judge James Bonifant heard arguments Tuesday morning from attorneys for the Maryland State Board of Elections to allow the hundreds of thousands of expected mail-in ballots to be counted as early as Oct. 1 to avoid delays in determining the winners in the fall contests.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Dan Cox voiced opposition to a proposal to allow earlier counting of mail-in ballots during a hearing Tuesday in Montgomery County Circuit Count. The Maryland State Board of Elections says the change is needed to speed up election results, while Cox claims it would damage the integrity of the process. Credit: Emmett Gartner / Capital News Service

Attorneys for Maryland Republican gubernatorial nominee Dan Cox, who is challenging the petition, argued against the change.

Election board members said the current rule of waiting to count votes until the Thursday after the election will “leave local, statewide, and even federal contests without certified results until late December 2022 or early January 2023.”

The General Assembly passed a bill, HB862, in May that would have allowed counting mail-in ballots up to eight business days before the first day of early voting. Republican Gov. Larry Hogan vetoed the bill.

Cox has said he opposed the change in counting the votes because it may jeopardize the integrity of the election.

“This is a day about conserving our constitutional and legal integrity in Maryland,” Cox said at a press conference outside the court.

Cox’s opponent, Democrat Wes Moore, supports changing how mail-in ballots are counted.

“We agree with Gov. Hogan and the bi-partisan state board of elections to authorize early canvassing, which will support our election workers and ensure that Maryland voters have timely, accurate election results without unnecessary and avoidable delays,” said Moore spokesperson Carter Elliott, IV.

Cox’s attorneys, however, claimed they were not opposing the petition’s content. Instead, they said they object because the change would bypass the Maryland General Assembly’s constitutional mandate to amend election laws.

“This is not a determination of whether the ideas the board of elections is posing are good,” said Ed Hartman, an Annapolis lawyer representing Cox. “That is not for the court to decide.”

“The General Assembly has already convened about that thoroughly… but the governor vetoed that bill.”

CNS reporter Timothy Elijah Dashiell contributed to this story. This article is republished with permission from CNSMaryland.org.


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