Absentee voting instruction violates law, North Carolina plaintiffs say

(The Center Square) – Litigation filed against North Carolina’s State Board of Elections on Tuesday contests a memo of instruction to county boards of elections in conflict with absentee by mail ballot state laws.

For the board, it’s lawsuit No. 6 in 43 days, and the fourth in 12.

Virginia Wasserberg, registered in Pasquotank County, is joined by the North Carolina Republican Party and the Republican National Committee on the complaint. They say the state board sent instruction to the 100 county boards “that disregards election laws requiring absentee ballot security envelopes to be sealed in order for the ballot to count,” a release says.

“State law is clear in this matter and it is unfortunate that Director Bell is acting beyond her authority,” state party Chairman Jason Simmons said of Elections Board Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell. “We will continue to enforce integrity in the elections process and adherence to statutory requirements.”

The litigation says Numbered Memo 2021-03, an instruction from Bell, “issued guidance” and “undermines the protections afforded by the General Assembly’s carefully drafted absentee-voting statutes.” Four statute references are named that require “an absentee ballot must be received by the proper county board of elections in a sealed envelope for the ballot to be counted.”

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