A judge on Friday threw out a lawsuit claiming that the Fairfax County Office of Elections had improperly accepted absentee ballot applications.
The suit, filed last week by the Virginia Institute for Public Policy, said that the office was approving mailed absentee-ballot applications of voters who hadn鈥檛 provided the last four digits of their Social Security number, as . It included an affidavit by a woman who said she had seen that more than 300 such applications had been approved.
In its written response, the elections office pointed to that says such a suit can only be brought by an 鈥渁ggrieved voter,鈥 a candidate or a candidate鈥檚 campaign or party. The Virginia Institute for Public Policy, being a nonprofit corporation, isn鈥檛 any of those, and on Friday, Judge Michael Devine agreed that they didn鈥檛 have standing to sue.
While the institute said it鈥檚 dedicated to fair elections, Devine said that didn鈥檛 put them into the category of a party with a direct interest: 鈥淓verybody who votes shares that interest.鈥
The defendants don’t claim all of the applications were completely filled out. In a joint stipulation entered in court Friday, both sides agreed Fairfax County General Registrar Scott Konopasek 鈥渉as accepted and approved some applications for absentee and ‘vote by mail’ ballots that were submitted by mail (or other remote means) that did not include the last four digits of the applicants’ Social Security numbers.
J. Christian Adams, a lawyer representing the Virginia Institute for Public Policy, said he wasn鈥檛 sure whether they would appeal.
91欧美激情’s Neal Augenstein contributed to this report.
