Embattled Trump fighting mail-in voting in the 2020 elections

AFP
US President Donald Trump has launched a battle against mail-in voting in the 2020 elections, which health experts say is crucial to limiting the spread of the coronavirus.
AFP
Embattled Trump fighting mail-in voting in the 2020 elections
AFP

US President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House on Tuesday in Washington, DC.

US President Donald Trump has launched a battle against mail-in voting in the 2020 elections, which health experts say is crucial to limiting the spread of the coronavirus, but which he fears would favor Democratic rival Joe Biden.

Facing an uphill fight for re-election, Trump on Monday said he would sue Nevada to block the state from allowing all its voters to cast ballots for the November 3 election via the US Postal Service.

“They’ve lost ballots. There’s fraudulent ballots,” he said.

In a tweet he suggested another motive: “Nevada’s clubhouse Governor made it impossible for Republicans to win the state,” Trump wrote on Twitter.

“Using Covid to steal the state. See you in Court!”

The 50 states each manage their own voting processes, and they have long permitted absent residents to vote by mail. Five already allow all their voters to mail it in.

The need is clear. COVID-19 remains out of control in much of the country, with more than 45,000 new cases reported every day.

Long lines at voting stations during primaries earlier this year showed the risk to voters and poll workers, who are often older retirees.

But instituting mail-in voting nationwide in a short period is a massive technological and logistical challenge.

Nathaniel Persily, a Stanford University Law School elections expert, estimates that 50-70 million votes could be cast in November via the United States Postal Service, and another 50 million in person. That means in a short time localities have to get more materials and machinery prepared, and get the information and ballots to voters.

The problems were manifest in recent primaries. One congressional fight in New York is still unresolved after six weeks in part because of the Postal Service’s poor handling of ballots.

In Wisconsin in April, tens of thousands of people never received their mail ballots; thousands more weren’t counted because they were delivered late; and 23,000 were disqualified for small technical errors related to completing the form.

“This is the largest transformation of the infrastructure of American elections in the nation’s history, and we are doing it in a four-month period,” Persily said.

“It poses incredible challenges for the jurisdictions. Right now many of them are not ready.”

Trump and his Republican Party appear determined to fight it.

Persily says more than 130 lawsuits have been filed across the country over mail-in voting.

Generally, Republicans are trying to limit the practice, arguing it raises security and fraud risks, while Democrats want fewer restrictions to make sure no one is disenfranchised.

Trump — who himself has voted by mail — has made clear he believes that the Democrats will reap more votes if the practice is universal.

Mail-in voting “doesn’t work out well for Republicans,” he said in April.

Trump has repeatedly warned that mail-in voting will lead to massive fraud, a claim not supported by any evidence from states already offering voting by mail.

Weakened by tight budgets, falling income, and coronavirus in its ranks, the USPS is a weak link in getting ballots to voters and back to authorities for the count on time.

That raises the prospect of long legal fights, such as the one in New York now, over whether mailed-in ballots should be counted or disqualified.

It also could mean a long wait for White House and congressional election results.

There are also worries that Trump, who says he does not believe the USPS can do the job, could hamstring its election service.


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