Boston Herald

Sorting fact from fiction at post office

- By NEIL PATEL Neil Patel co-founded The Daily Caller.

Do we really have to worry about the Postal Service? That’s the latest faux controvers­y to dominate our political debate. As usual, there’s plenty of blame to go around on how we got into this mess.

In the midst of the COVID19 pandemic, it’s reasonable to presume we need more absentee voting. Packing voters into overcrowde­d indoor polling places with long lines is not a good idea. Our government and politician­s of all stripes have a duty to promote free and fair elections whether in person or absentee.

At the same time, there are legitimate concerns about universal mail-in voting. Absentee voting is different. With absentee voting, a specific voter requests his or her specific ballot to vote by mail. That system has been used for years and — especially in the states doing it best — it works pretty well.

Universal mail-in voting is different. With universal mail-in voting, the government would mail ballots to everyone, regardless of whether they request them. Some places even allow for “ballot harvesting,” where a third party can collect ballots for many people and file them in bulk. This system has not traditiona­lly been used widely, and it raises legitimate concerns over voter fraud.

The Postal Service controvers­y falls in the midst of the very legitimate debate. We should all be able to agree that to the extent mail-in voting is used — the absentee variety would be my preference — the Postal Service has to be able to handle its role to ensure a fair election in a reasonable time frame.

The Postal Service — which is supposed to operate independen­tly based on funding from the postal fees it charges — has been losing money for years. Due to email and other forms of communicat­ion, we send about 30% fewer letters each year than we did just a decade ago. To combat this, the Postal Service has been reducing its operating costs. That all makes sense.

Now comes the controvers­ial part. There are three drivers contributi­ng to it. Two are self-inflected by the Republican­s, and one — likely the biggest — is being driven pretty disingenuo­usly by the Democrats.

First, it would have made sense to pause some Postal Service operating cuts as it became more and more clear after COVID-19 that we were going to rely more on the mail this election cycle than in any other. Taking mail sorting machines out of service and cutting back on mailboxes that are less used may not be the best moves when you know the mail will be crucial for a national election. A pause in operating cuts makes sense in case the equipment is needed for real, substantiv­e reasons — to ensure a fair and timely election — and also to induce confidence among the American people that our sacred right to vote will not be abridged due to the pandemic. This is exactly the justificat­ion the Postal Service provided this week when they finally announced such a pause. It was, of course, too late to stem the controvers­y.

Second, as is the case with so many controvers­ies of this era, President Trump did not do himself any favors with his comments on the matter. Trump said he opposed more money for the Postal Service because without that money, “You can’t have universal mail-in voting, because they’re not equipped to have it.” The president is not wrong to question universal mail-in voting, but his statement that he was going to unilateral­ly in effect stop it through a holdup of postal funds only added fire to Democrats’ claims that he was against taking steps to have a fair election during the pandemic.

Finally, in the aftermath of the president’s misstateme­nt and the Postal Service’s mistake in not foreseeing this issue, Democrats, postal unions and their allies in the media have pounced to demagogue this issue into a full-blown election-stealing conspiracy. Claims that mail sorting is being reduced and postboxes are being removed to disenfranc­hise voters are not backed by the facts. The cuts were in place for years — going back to the Obama years, in fact. But that’s not stopping the demagoguer­y. Pictures of mailboxes with locks on them — found, ironically, to be many years old — are going viral all over social media.

Activists, celebritie­s, some media outlets and even our leaders who should know better are fueling the fire of this conspiracy theory. They are posting pictures of locked boxes from years ago and trying to stir up a frenzy. They are succeeding, too.

It’s amazing that some people still don’t understand why the American people have lost so much trust in our leaders and our leading institutio­ns.

 ?? AP FILE ?? TRUSTING THE MAIL: A customer wears a face mask and gloves as she drops mail into a curbside mail collection box in Los Angeles on Monday.
AP FILE TRUSTING THE MAIL: A customer wears a face mask and gloves as she drops mail into a curbside mail collection box in Los Angeles on Monday.

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