4 to 4. It's was a tie so the order remains. Guess which Judge joined with the other side?

Supreme Court declines to block Pennsylvania mail-in ballot extension

An evenly divided Supreme Court said Monday it is declining to block a Pennsylvania state court ruling allowing mail-in ballots in the crucial battleground state to be counted as long as they*re postmarked by Election Day, even if they arrive up to three days later.

The order from the high court is a victory for Democrats, as the presidential campaigns prepare for an all-out battle for the state's 20 electoral votes.

The justices offered no explanation for their decision. Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh all noted they would have granted Republicans' application for a stay.
The announcement from the court indicates that the shorthanded court divided 4-4, with Chief Justice John Roberts joining with the three remaining

Democratic appointees to refuse to grant emergency relief in the case. A tied vote leaves the existing ruling in place.
The result raises the possibility that if the Senate acts in the coming days to confirm President Donald Trump*s nominee, federal Judge Amy Coney Barrett, to fill the court*s current vacancy the court could form a majority capable of stepping in and blocking the ruling Pennsylvania's state Supreme

Court issued last month extending the ballot-receipt deadline in the state by three days.
Republicans argued in emergency applications filed recently that the state court*s ruling, triggered by the coronavirus pandemic and potential postal delays, violated the U.S. Constitution by usurping the role of the state legislature and by pushing the election past Election Day.

Democrats said those arguments were without merit, with the state Democratic Party urging the justices to move the case from the emergency docket to the regular one and issuing a precedent-setting ruling that would strengthen Democrats* hand in fighting similar GOP-led legal challenges in other states, which the court also did not do.

Citing the ongoing dangers posed by Covid-19, Democrats have been pressing to extend ballot counting periods and ease mail-in voting by lifting technical requirements * while President Donald Trump has warned based on little evidence that those changes will lead to massive fraud. Some in the GOP have chafed at the president*s statements, noting that Republicans often outperform Democrats in mail-in and absentee balloting.
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In a Sept. 17 ruling, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court approved Democratic Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar*s request to extend the absentee ballot receipt deadline to 5:00 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 6. She said such an extension was needed to address delays due to recent postal service changes that could result in ballots not reaching election officials as quickly as they have in the past
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