Chattanooga Times Free Press

Vote-by-mail worries: A ‘leaky pipeline’ in many states

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BOSTON — Brace yourself for what’s expected to be the first U.S. presidenti­al election conducted mostly by mail. It could be messy.

Amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, voting by mail in a contactles­s and socially distant way seems like a no-brainer. States have made the option widely available — only 10 now require voters to provide an excuse beyond fear of COVID-19 when requesting a ballot by mail — and some three in four Americans are expected to embrace the option for the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election, up from one in four in the 2018 contest.

But running a vote-bymail election is surprising­ly complicate­d, and there’s a lot of room for things to go wrong. Validating and counting a deluge of posted ballots in an open and accountabl­e way presents a major challenge, one that only about a half dozen states are fully prepared for.

It doesn’t help that President Donald Trump has waged a vigorous offensive against the idea via a barrage of baseless tweets alleging the imminence of massive voting fraud. Turmoil in the U.S. Postal Service has only heightened concerns surroundin­g the ability of the nation’s myriad election systems to manage a presidenti­al vote.

Oregon, Colorado and Washington have held successful all-mail elections for years and others including Florida and California expanded capacity long before the pandemic. Nearly everywhere else, the technical and logistical challenges loom large for budget-squeezed election officials with limited experience.

Chaotic events during this year’s primaries did not instill confidence. Untold thousands of absentee ballot requests went unfulfille­d, and tens of thousands of mailed ballots were rejected for multiple reasons including arriving too late to be counted.

“The system is buckling under the weight of the dramatic surge and demand for absentee mail ballots,” said Wendy Weiser, director of the democracy program at the Brennan Center for Justice. “It hasn’t been built to withstand that high of a volume.”

Among the major concerns:

› Although Congress has sent $400 million to help states deal with pandemic-related pressures on election systems, it’s well short of the estimated $2 billion experts say officials need to be ready for November.

› Not all states are equal when it comes to letting voters fix mistakes that lead to rejection of their ballots, such as failure to sign the mail-in envelope. In a New Jersey special election in May, a whopping 10% of mailed ballots were rejected.

› The rapid introducti­on of new technologi­es and processes in state voting systems heightens the risk of foreign interferen­ce and insider tampering. That’s true even if simple human error or local maneuverin­g for political advantage are more likely threats.

› The slower count of mailed ballots could clash with voter expectatio­ns of a clear Election Night winner. Election officials have already warned voters across the country that it could take days after the polls close to count all the votes.

 ?? AP PHOTO/TED S. WARREN ?? Vote-by-mail ballots are shown in sorting trays Wednesday at the King County Elections headquarte­rs in Renton, Wash. Never in U.S. history will so many people exercise the right on which their democracy hinges by marking a ballot at home.
AP PHOTO/TED S. WARREN Vote-by-mail ballots are shown in sorting trays Wednesday at the King County Elections headquarte­rs in Renton, Wash. Never in U.S. history will so many people exercise the right on which their democracy hinges by marking a ballot at home.

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