After court ruling, few Minnesotans risked late ballots

A woman sits at a folding table while wearing a mask, surrounded by boxes.
Election judge Judith Barnes assembles packets of absentee ballots on Oct. 6 that will be mailed out at the Stearns County Service Center. Fewer than 2,500 voters had ballots come in after Election Day.
Paul Middlestaedt for MPR News file

Relatively few Minnesota voters risked having a mail ballot arrive after Election Day, judging by the small number that came in during the subsequent week. 

New figures from 82 of 87 counties compiled by the Secretary of State’s office show only 2,436 ballots arrived late and had to be segregated under a federal court’s order. Those ballots were counted and there hasn’t been a direct challenge to their validity.

Total absentee ballots arriving after Election Day, 2016-2020
The 2020 election has reported fewer Minnesota absentee ballots arriving by mail after Election Day than past elections, even though in those elections all ballots had to be received before Election Day, while in 2020 voters were initially told they could return them up to a week later.
David H. Montgomery | MPR News

Many voters rushed to drop off ballots or decided to vote in person after the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals cast doubt on a promised seven-day mail delivery cushion. 

The extra window was the result of a court decree agreed to by Secretary of State Steve Simon and groups who sued for more time amid the pandemic. A group of Republicans sued, saying the decree wasn’t constitutional. The federal appeals court ordered five days before the election that those ballots would be kept separate in case the votes had to be subtracted during the ongoing litigation.

Elections officials and prominent politicians urged voters not to take a chance. And it appears many of the 228,000 people in possession of an unvoted mail or absentee ballot chose to vote at a polling site instead.

The five counties that weren’t part of the ballot compilation are: Becker, Beltrami, Houston, Marshall and Steele. They were not expected to add significantly to the total given the number of outstanding ballots.

Minnesota hasn’t certified its election results yet, but final turnout will wind up at about 80 percent of eligible voters.

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