NAACP Says US Postal Service Voting Plan Violates Settlement

WASHINGTON, June ⁠3 (Reuters) – The NAACP asked a ​federal court Wednesday to revive a 2020 ‌lawsuit against the ‌U.S. Postal Service to ⁠challenge ⁠the Trump administration’s new restrictions on mail-in voting, ​arguing that the agency’s proposed rule violates a settlement agreement requiring expedited ​handling of mailed ballots.

The Postal Service ⁠last week ⁠proposed a rule ⁠to ​require states to provide lists of voters before ​the mail ⁠agency would deliver ballots. In its motion before the District Court for the District of Columbia, ⁠the NAACP claimed the USPS rule would create ⁠a process “that directly violates its obligations under the agreement.”

The group asked a U.S. judge to quickly get involved, saying the plan could “prevent millions of eligible voters from receiving mail-in ballots to which ⁠they are entitled.”

President Donald Trump has repeatedly said without evidence that voting by mail is more vulnerable ​to fraud.

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