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Judge orders U.S. Postal Service to treat all election mail as 1st class or priority

A federal judge on Monday ordered the U.S. Postal Service to expedite all November election mail and to approve additional overtime for postal workers.

Ruling also orders all overtime to be approved during election period

A United States Postal Service (USPS) worker loads mail into a delivery truck at the post office in Royal Oak, Mich., on Aug. 17. A judge ordered Monday that all election mail should be treated as priority or 1st class during the election period. (Rebecca Cook/Reuters)

A federal judge on Monday ordered the U.S. Postal Service to expedite all November election mail and to approve additional overtime for postal workers.

U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero in Manhattan, N.Y., said the postal service must treat to the extent possible all election mail as first-class mail or priority mail express and "shall pre-approve all overtime that has been or will be requested" between Oct. 26 and Nov. 6.

Marrero's opinion said that in prior elections, including 2018, the postal service typically treated election mail as first-class mail, even if it was sent at marketing mail rates.

"Multiple managerial failures have undermined the postal employees' ability to fulfil their vital mission," he wrote.

Last week, U.S. District Judge Stanley Bastian in Yakima, Wash., said he was issuing a nationwide injunction sought by 14 states in a case against President Donald Trump, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and the U.S. Postal Service over July changes to the service.

An individual deposits letters into a USPS collection mailbox in Philadelphia on Aug. 14. (Rachel Wisniewski/Reuters)

The 14 states, led by Washington, had filed a motion for a preliminary injunction asking the court to immediately halt a "leave mail behind" policy that required postal trucks to leave at certain times, regardless of whether mail was loaded.

DeJoy, a Trump supporter, said in August that he would halt many of the cost-cutting changes he put in place until after the presidential election after Democrats accused him of trying to put his thumb on the scales to help Trump, which he has denied. A surge in mail-in ballots is expected because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Postal Service spokesperson Dave Partenheimer said last week while the agency was exploring its legal options, it was "ready and committed to handle whatever volume of election mail it receives."

"Our No. 1 is to deliver election mail on time," Partenheimer said.