Baltimore Sun

Postmaster: Ballots to have priority

Senate panel told cuts will stay, won’t slow mail delivery

- By Lisa Mascaro, Anthony Izaguirre and Christina A. Cassidy

WASHINGTON — New Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said Friday he has no plans to restore mailboxes and other agency cuts made since he took over in June, sparking fresh questions over how the Postal Service will ensure timely delivery of an expected surge of mail-in ballots for the November election.

It was DeJoy’s first time publicly answering questions since summer mail delays brought a public outcry. Testifying before a Senate committee, the ally of President Donald Trump said it was his “sacred duty” that ballots arrive on time. But he told senators he did not yet have a plan for handling a crush of election mail.

From the White House, Trump delivered fresh complaints over the mail-in ballots expected because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. As he did, the House pushed ahead with plans for a rare Saturday vote to block the postal cutbacks and funnel $25 billion to shore up operations.

DeJoy declared that the Postal Service

“is fully capable and committed to delivering the nation’s election mail securely and on-time.” He distanced himself from Trump’s objections about widescale mailin voting and said ensuring that ballots arrive was his “No. 1 priority between now and Election Day.”

The outcry over mail delays and warnings of political interferen­ce have put the Postal Service at the center of the nation’s tumultuous election year, with Americans of both parties rallying around one of the nation’s oldest and more popular institutio­ns.

The new postmaster general, a Trump donor who took the job at the start of summer to revamp the agency, is facing a backlash over changes since his arrival.

Democrats warn his cost-cutting initiative­s are causing an upheaval that threatens the election.

With mounting pressure, DeJoy promised this week to postpone any further changes until after the election, saying he wanted to avoid even the perception of interferen­ce. A number of blue mailboxes have been removed, back-of-shop sorting equipment has been shut down and overtime hours have been limited.

But DeJoy told senators he has no plans to restore the equipment, saying it’s “not needed.” And he stood by a new rule that limits late delivery trips, which several postal workers have said is a major cause of delivery delays. He vowed more changes to

postal operations after November.

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said the public’s concern is understand­able, particular­ly given Trump’s efforts to stop universal mail-in ballots. Many states are encouragin­g mail-in voting in response to voters’pandemic-related fears of going to crowded polling centers on Election Day.

Trump has said he wants to block agency emergency funding that would help the service handle a great increase in mail-in ballots.

At Friday’s hearing, DeJoy said he’d had “no idea” equipment was removed until the public outcry.

Now that it’s widely known, Democrats pressed him for his plan to ensure election mail and ballots arrive on time.

“Do you have a more detailed plan?” demanded Sen. Maggie Hassan, of New Hampshire, asking for it by Sunday.

“I don’t think we’ll have a complete plan by Sunday night,” DeJoy replied, acknowledg­ing it was just being formed.

On Monday, he is expected to testify before the House.

Meanwhile, attorneys general in Pennsylvan­ia, California, Delaware, Maine, Massachuse­tts, North Carolina and Washington D.C., filed a lawsuit Friday to halt the changes. In all, some 20 states and several voting rights groups are now suing.

As House Democrats prepare for Saturday’s vote, Republican­s are mounting a counter-offensive, saying the concerns about mail delivery are overblown and the money is unnecessar­y.

In a memoto House Republican­s, leaders called the legislatio­n a “conspiracy theory” by Democrats to “spread fear and misinforma­tion” about mail operations.

Neverthele­ss, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is eyeing a $10 billion postal rescue as part of the next COVID-19 relief package. The White House has said it would be open to more postal funding as part of a broader bill.

The Postal Service has been struggling financiall­y under a decline in mail volume, COVID-related costs and a rare, and critics say cumbersome, congressio­nal requiremen­t to fund in advance its retiree health care benefits.

For many, the Postal Service provides a lifeline, delivering not just cards and letters but also prescripti­on drugs and other items that are especially needed by mail during the pandemic.

The postal board of governors, appointed by Trump, selected DeJoy to be postmaster. A GOP donor, he previously owned a logistics business that was a longtime Postal Service contractor. He maintains significan­t financial stakes in companies that do

business or compete with the agency, raising conflict of interest questions.

In a statement, the Postal Service said DeJoy has made all required financial disclosure­s but that he might have to divest some holdings if conflicts arise.

 ?? U.S. SENATE HOMELAND SECURITY AND GOVERNMENT­AL AFFAIRS COMMITTEE ?? Postal Service Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is sworn in over a livestream for a virtual Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee hearing Friday.
U.S. SENATE HOMELAND SECURITY AND GOVERNMENT­AL AFFAIRS COMMITTEE Postal Service Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is sworn in over a livestream for a virtual Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee hearing Friday.
 ?? NATI HARNIK/AP ?? Tracy Astorino drops off an applicatio­n for a mail-in ballot at the election commission in Omaha, Nebraska, this week.
NATI HARNIK/AP Tracy Astorino drops off an applicatio­n for a mail-in ballot at the election commission in Omaha, Nebraska, this week.

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