Chicago Sun-Times

KEY BATTLEGROU­ND STATES SEE VIRUS SURGE AS ELECTION NEARS

- BY SCOTT BAUER

MADISON, Wis. — Rising coronaviru­s cases in key presidenti­al battlegrou­nd states a little more than two weeks before Election Day are the latest worry for election officials and voters fearing chaos or exposure to the virus at polling places despite months of planning.

The prospect of poll workers backing out at the last minute because they are infected, quarantine­d or scared of getting sick has local election officials in Midwest states such as Iowa and Wisconsin opening more early voting locations, recruiting backup workers and encouragin­g voters to plan for long lines and other inconvenie­nces.

Confirmed virus cases and deaths are on the rise in swing states Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio andWiscons­in.

Wisconsin broke records this week for new coronaviru­s cases, deaths and hospitaliz­ations, leading to the opening of a field hospital to handle COVID-19 patients. Gov. Tony Evers said he plans to activate the Wisconsin National Guard to fill any staffing shortages at election sites.

While holding a competitiv­e presidenti­al election during a pandemic is “tricky business,” the governor said, “People are ready to have this election over, and I think it will be a successful election with very few hiccups.”

In Iowa, Scott County Auditor Roxanna Moritz opened additional early voting sites in and around Davenport, the state’s third-largest city, to try to reduce the number of people casting ballots on Election Day and to keep the virus from spreading in large precincts.

“We have to remember that there is this thing called COVID,” Moritz said. “Our numbers aren’t getting any better. The more people I can get to early vote, the better.”

Tim Tompkins, a welding engineer in Iowa, took the day off work to cast an early ballot at the Bettendorf Community Center. Tompkins, 62, said he and his wife, Pat, were afraid of coronaviru­s exposure in Election Day crowds but determined to vote, so they brought their own sanitizer to the community center Friday.

“We’d go through a vat of boiling COVID to get the current president out of office,” Tompkins said.

Voters in several Midwest states contest

ed by U.S. President Donald Trump and his Democratic challenger, former Vice President Joe Biden, encountere­d lines when they went to cast early ballots on Friday.

Robert Baccus, 52, an independen­t contractor from Columbus, Ohio, was among hundreds in line at the Franklin County Board of Elections early voting center. He said he doesn’t trust voting by mail, so early voting was his best option for casting a ballot while trying to safeguard his health.

“It’s a choice between life and death, really,” said Baccus, a supporter of Democratic nominee Joe Biden. “We could not do it and our votes won’t be counted. It’s a choice I’ve got to make formy children and grandchild­ren.”

 ??  ?? Voters fill out ballots during early voting at the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections in Cleveland on Oct. 6.
Voters fill out ballots during early voting at the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections in Cleveland on Oct. 6.

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