---
title: Balancing Access and Integrity - June 30, 2026
description: North Carolina must tighten mail‑in voting rules to protect ballot security and election integrity after a key Supreme Court ruling.
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date: 2026-06-30T10:03:34Z
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### Show Notes

**Episode summary:**

In this daily update, we examine a recent 5–4 Supreme Court decision upholding a Mississippi law that lets officials count mail‑in ballots for up to five days after Election Day. While the ruling is disappointing, it highlights the core reality of our federal system: states still have broad authority to decide how they run their elections.

With that in mind, North Carolina’s no‑excuse mail‑in ballot rules create serious risks for ballot security and election integrity and needs to change. We contrast the tightly controlled process at in‑person polling places with the loose chain of custody around mailed ballots and calls for the state to sharply restrict mail‑in voting. Ultimately, he challenges voters and lawmakers to ask a simple question of anyone requesting a mail‑in ballot: why can you not vote in person?  
 **What you’ll learn / Key moments**

- 00:01 – Why most mail‑in voting needs to go.
- 00:09 – Supreme Court’s 5–4 decision on Mississippi’s mail‑in ballot law.
- 00:20 – What the ruling says about federalism and state control of elections.
- 00:55 – How North Carolina’s no‑excuse mail‑in rules work and why they’re a problem.
- 01:35 – Why in‑person voting is more secure and why North Carolina must restrict mail‑in ballots.

**What you can do**

If you care about election integrity in North Carolina, start by getting informed and then getting involved. Share this episode with friends, neighbors, and local activists so they understand how loose mail‑in rules can undermine secure elections. Talk to your legislators, county election officials, and party leaders about tightening mail‑in voting to truly serve voters who cannot get to the polls, while closing the door on convenience voting that invites abuse. And then do the most important thing: plan your calendar, show up at the polling place, and cast your ballot in person so your vote is secure, secret, and counted.









### Transcript

![Ballot being put in the mail](https://thewilmingtonstandard.com/images/daily_update/2026/june/june30/jun302026-article.png)

What we need to do is get rid of most mail in voting.

This is the Wilmington Standard Daily Update for Tuesday, June 30, 2026.

Yesterday, in a 5-4 decision, [the Supreme Court upheld a Mississippi law](https://www.thecentersquare.com/national/article_7d84ea5e-70bc-4395-ba93-1473599c1dde.html) which allows officials to count mailed-in ballots up to 5 days after the polls close on election day. The outcome of the decision – given that Justice Amy Barret authored the opinion of the majority and was appointed by President Trump – is disappointing. But it does reinforce one basic concept that is fundamental to our Republic based on a Federal System – that unless specifically restricted by Federal law the states have the power to determine how they go about doing things – including how they run elections.

Which means here in North Carolina, we really need to start restricting the use of mail in options to vote.

Currently, [we are a no-excuse state](https://www.ncsbe.gov/voting/vote-mail) for mail-in ballots. Whether someone is in the military, traveling, sick, aged – or simply just doesn’t want to make the effort to actually go to the polls – all that person has to do is request a ballot and it will be sent to him via the US Postal Service. In New Hanover County for the 2024 presidential election, [nearly 14,000 ballots went out by mail](https://www.ncsbe.gov/results-data/absentee-and-provisional-data). 14,000 ballots that were handled by multiple people, cast in ways that were neither secure nor secret, gathered by who knows who, and returned by any number of people. The potential for fraud is enormous.

In contrast, at the polling booth the only person [who handles the ballot](https://thewilmingtonstandard.com/guest-opinions-and-editorials/nhc-gop-election-integrity-committee-2024-general-elections-observations-and-after-actions-report?highlight=WyJiYWxsb3QiXQ==) is the voter. After checking for valid ID, the voter is given a ballot and directed to the voting area. The ballot is filled out – by one person in secret – and taken to the tabulator. If that ballot is ever handled again, it is done so in a controlled environment with officials and witnesses guarding every step of the way.

How many races in our state have been decided with very small margins? Consequently, we need to make sure every ballot cast is legal and secure – and every secure ballot is counted. We need to restrict mail in voting in North Carolina because it is inherently insecure – and indeed poses a huge risk to our state and our country.

Why can you not vote in person? That is the basic question that North Carolina needs to ask of every voter who requests a mail in ballot. [There are valid reasons](https://thewilmingtonstandard.com/podcast/the-daily-update/daily-update-january-13-2026) – and we need to respect those.

Simply just cannot be bothered to show up because you have other things to do? Then until you get your calendar – and your priorities – in order – you should not be able to vote. And thanks to Justice Barrett, we have the ability to make sure you don’t.

For the Wilmington Standard, I’m Reuel Sample. Thanks for listening.









### About Reuel Sample

![Reuel Sample](https://thewilmingtonstandard.com/images/staff/reuelsample.png)Reuel Sample is the Editor-in-Chief of The Wilmington Standard. A graduate of Grove City College and Princeton Theological Seminary, he has served as both a Presbyterian Pastor and a Navy Chaplain. He is the product of a classical liberal arts education combined with real world experience in politics and business and conservative Christian worldview firmly rooted in the Reformed tradition. He is the host of several podcasts including the NHC GOP Podcast, the Pastor's Voice, and co-hosts the Nikki and Reuel Podcast Experience. An avid sailor, he has sailed around the world as a youth and to the Azores as a teen as well as extensive trips up and down the east coast of the United States. He is honored to be married to his wife Pam and makes his home in Wilmington, NC.















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