Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

POSTAGE QUESTIONS emerge in mail-in ballot debate.

- JULIE CARR SMYTH

COLUMBUS, Ohio — As more states embrace mail-in voting amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, the often overlooked detail of postage has emerged as a partisan dividing line.

Questions over whether postage will be required for absentee ballot applicatio­ns and the actual ballots, who pays for it and what happens to envelopes without stamps are the subject of lawsuits and statehouse political debates.

Lawsuits filed in Florida by the Democratic super PAC Priorities USA, in Georgia by Black Voters Matter and elsewhere argue that stamps constitute a monetary requiremen­t akin to an illegal poll tax. Voting-rights groups say stamp requiremen­ts are another impediment that hits lower-income and minority communitie­s hardest.

“Charging money for the right to vote is unconstitu­tional, whether it’s a penny or a dollar,” said Sean Young, legal director of the ACLU of Georgia, which is representi­ng Black Voters Matter. “Many voters lack internet access. Many voters lack a credit card, which is required to buy stamps online. One voter did not receive his book of stamps for two weeks after he ordered it.”

The postage debate has become vehement in Ohio, where the state elections chief, a Republican, has asked for the authority to prepay postage on absentee ballot applicatio­ns and the ballots themselves. So far, the GOP-led Legislatur­e has resisted.

Opponents of the proposal by Secretary of State Frank

LaRose argue that prepaying postage could lead to more mailin ballots being requested than used. Voters who requested a mail-in ballot but for whatever reason choose to vote in person on Election Day will have to cast a provisiona­l ballot so local election boards can be sure they did not vote twice. About 20% of provisiona­l ballots are typically rejected.

During floor debate in June, state Rep. Bill Seitz, a Cincinnati Republican, said it’s also an added expense in a year the virus has ravaged government budgets. It would cost the state $1.5 million on top of the $1.5 million Ohio already is paying to mail ballot applicatio­ns for November’s presidenti­al election.

“We always hear the same rhetoric,” said Aklima Khondoker, a staff attorney with the Georgia ACLU. “‘It’s too expensive, it’s going to lead to fraud, it’s an administra­tion issue.’ No, it’s not. It’s racism.”

She said postage requiremen­ts disproport­ionately affect people of color, who are less likely to have the income, transporta­tion or time to obtain stamps.

The postage debate has extended this year to include young voters, who have little experience sending and receiving paper mail and visiting post offices. As part of its lawsuit, the Georgia ACLU submitted statements from young voters who had never used a stamp.

Marti Johnson, a spokeswoma­n for the U.S. Postal Service, said the post office delivers every piece of election mail to its destinatio­n — with or without adequate postage.

“We are proactivel­y working with state and local election officials on mailing requiremen­ts, including postage payment,” she said in a statement. “In cases where a ballot enters the mailstream without the proper amount of postage, the Postal Service will collect postage from the appropriat­e Board of Elections.”

Advocates argue that most voters, and particular­ly voters who fear being disenfranc­hised, aren’t likely to mail a ballot without postage and trust the system to deliver it.

But Khondoker, of the Georgia ACLU, said the exact amount required is beside the point.

“The stamp issue is not about two adhesive pieces of paper that we put on an envelope,” she said. “It’s about what it means to families and individual­s. It’s about an additional sacrifice they have to make to exercise a right that’s fundamenta­l to our democracy, one they’re guaranteed in the Constituti­on.”

Not all court rulings have gone in advocates’ favor.

In Florida last month, U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle rejected a motion by liberal groups that would have required free postage for mail-in ballots on the grounds that stamps represent a poll tax. Hinkle compared stamps to the costs voters incur when driving or riding the bus to the polls.

“Postage charged by the United States Postal Service — like the fee charged by any courier or the bus fare for getting to the polls to vote in person — is not a tax,” Hinkle wrote.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d to Terry Spencer of The Associated Press.

 ?? (AP/Tony Dejak) ?? Mike Babinski opens ballot applicatio­ns Tuesday at the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections building in Cleveland.
(AP/Tony Dejak) Mike Babinski opens ballot applicatio­ns Tuesday at the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections building in Cleveland.

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