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Record 76% of Americans able to vote by mail in 2020 despite Trump’s complaints

All states allow at least some mail voting but some will now make it more accessible to voters than others

Juliette Love,Matt Stevens,Lazaro Gamio
Wednesday 12 August 2020 14:54 BST
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Donald Trump says mail-in ballots will lead to 'greatest election disaster in history'

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At least three-quarters of all American voters will be eligible to receive a ballot in the mail for the 2020 election – the most in US history, according to a Times analysis. If recent election trends hold and turnout increases, as experts predict, roughly 80 million mail ballots will flood election offices this fall, more than double the number that were returned in 2016.

The rapid and seismic shift in how Americans will vote is because of the coronavirus pandemic. Concerns about the potential for virus transmission at polling places have forced many states to make adjustments on the fly that – despite Donald Trump’s protests – will make mail voting in America more accessible this fall than ever before.

“I have a hard time looking back at history and finding an election where there was this significant of a change to how elections are administered in this short a time period,” said Alex Padilla, the California secretary of state who chairs the Democratic Association of Secretaries of State.

Most of the changes are temporary and have been made administratively by state and local officials who have the power to make adjustments during emergencies like the pandemic.

All states allow at least some mail voting, but some will make it more accessible to voters than others.

In eight states and Washington, DC every registered voter will be mailed a ballot before the election. California, DC and Vermont will do this for the first time this fall.

In 34 states, voters can cite the coronavirus as a reason to vote absentee or they can cast absentee ballots without specifying a reason. In eight of them, every registered voter will automatically be mailed an application to request an absentee ballot. In the other 26 states, voters will need to procure an application themselves.

In eight states, voters still need a reason beyond the virus to vote absentee. That means many voters in these states will need to vote in person at a polling place, barring any last-minute rule changes.

Several of the states that made changes for the primaries are keeping them in place for the general election, while others are making separate adjustments for the fall. A handful of states have not made any modifications and appear unlikely to do so.

Overall, 24 states and Washington, D.C., have in some way expanded voter access to mail ballots for the 2020 general election, with the broad goal of making it easier for people to vote amid a global health crisis. And in some states that maintained relatively strict rules, individual counties have undertaken similar effort

Mail means higher turnout

During the presidential primaries, many states that made it easier for people to vote by mail saw higher turnout than states that made fewer changes.

Of the states that have held presidential primaries and caucuses this year, 31 saw an increase in turnout compared with 2016. Of those, 18 had sent either ballots or ballot applications to all voters before the primaries.

Six states continued to require voters to have a reason other than the virus in order to vote absentee in the primaries. In those states, voter turnout stayed roughly the same as 2016.

Michael McDonald, a University of Florida professor who studies American elections, said that recent election trends, including many of this year’s primaries, have indicated that turnout will be up in the fall compared with 2016 and that the widespread use of mail voting will shatter previous records.

“It’s sort of trite to say that you’re going to have the highest turnout rate of your lifetime or this is the most important election of your lifetime, but it really feels like that,” he said. “I’m still expecting this to have very high turnout in November. The outstanding question that we have is just: Will the election system be able to bear that?”

Indeed, the primaries also exposed the myriad problems that elections officials and voters could face this fall.

In Wisconsin, 11th-hour court rulings, long lines at the polls, a backlog of absentee ballot requests and complaints about missing or nullified mail ballots stretched the system to the brink of collapse. In Georgia’s most populous county, voters encountered an election meltdown rife with their own interminable lines and malfunctioning technology. And in New York, it took several weeks for overwhelmed officials to count thousands of mail ballots and deliver results.

All the while, Mr Trump has fiercely criticised mail voting – while allowing that military members and older Americans should be allowed to vote absentee – saying that sending ballots to voters directly would compromise the election’s integrity. More broadly, some Republicans have continued to insist without evidence that voting by mail favours Democrats.

Studies have repeatedly shown that voting fraud of any kind is extremely rare in the United States. And states and counties that have transitioned to all-mail voting have seen little evidence of partisan advantage.

Potential problems in November

Researchers said that thinly stretched election offices might quickly become overwhelmed by the volume of mail ballots. To help lessen their load, elections officials in several key swing states have already asked that lawmakers give them more leeway to prepare absentee ballots for counting as they arrive rather than after the polls close.

Their problems could be compounded by a lack of funding for the Postal Service. If there are slowdowns in either election offices or post offices, experts said, ballots may not get sent out in a timely manner or returned by postmark deadlines.

Richard Hasen, a professor of law and political science at the University of California, Irvine, said he remained “very worried” that scores of voters will be disenfranchised through no fault of their own. Because many voters will be unfamiliar with the mail voting process, Mr Hasen and other experts said, they could make technical errors when marking, signing, sealing or sending their ballots, leading to their ballots being rejected.

And those voting in person may have to confront poll worker shortages that onlookers say are likely to be exacerbated by the pandemic.

“It’s going to be bumpy,” said Amber McReynolds, the chief executive of the National Vote at Home Institute and Coalition. “Will it be a disaster in a particular state? That’s hard to tell at this moment.”

Well-prepared states that are accustomed to counting a high number of mail ballots – and where the presidential race is not close – could get called on election night. But experts say that in other states, the counting could delay race calls for at least a day or two. And in states where the presidential contest is tight and laws are inflexible, a clear picture of who has won could take weeks to develop.

Despite the challenges, Phil Keisling, who was Oregon’s secretary of state when it began mailing ballots to voters more than two decades ago, was among more than a half-dozen experts who expressed faith that election administrators would get their jobs done.

“Tens of millions of people are in election terra incognita, and so there’s anxiety, and it’s understandable,” Mr Keisling said. “But I am guardedly optimistic that we will run an election that will meet very high standards of professionalism and that the vast majority of Americans, even if they don’t like the results, are going to believe that the results are fair.”

New York Times

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