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Judge blocks US Postal Service’s proposed restrictions on mail-in voting

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 3:09 PM

NEW YORK, July 1 (Reuters) – A federal judge on Wednesday blocked the U.S. Postal Service’s proposed restrictions on ​mail-in voting, finding that they ‌violated a settlement with a leading civil rights group that required expedited mail-in ballot handling.

The decision by Washington-based U.S. District Judge Emmet ‌Sullivan ​marked the second defeat ⁠in the courts ⁠in as many weeks for U.S. President Donald Trump’s push to severely restrict mail-in voting ahead of the November ​3 midterm elections, with his Republican party locked in a tight battle ⁠to maintain control ⁠of both houses of Congress.

The ​Postal Service in May proposed a rule ​requiring states to provide lists of voters ‌and adopt new balloting procedures before the mail agency would make deliveries. If states did not comply, the ⁠Postal Service would refuse to deliver the ballots.

Sullivan, who was appointed to the bench by Democratic ⁠President ‌Bill Clinton, sided with rights ⁠group the NAACP, which argued ​that ‌the new rule would run ​afoul of ⁠a 2021 legal settlement which forced USPS officials to take “extraordinary measures” to ensure timely delivery of ballot mail.

(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York, Editing by ​Franklin Paul)