Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

The president hates mail-in voting, until he doesn’t

- Clarence Page Clarence Page, a member of the Tribune Editorial Board, blogs at www.chicagotri­bune.com/pagespage. cpage@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @cptime

OK, let’s try to get this straight. President Donald Trump doesn’t trust mail-in voting — until he does.

For example, he denounced the very idea of voting by mail as an invitation to commit voter fraud, a bipartisan suspicion, and a problem which he tends to pin solely on Democrats. That’s politics.

But the president changed that tune in the middle of this past week to suggest in a tweet that voting by mail is just dandy — if it is in states that are run by Republican governors.

That would include Florida, the president’s newly adopted home state where he, too, voted by mail in the recent primary election.

“Whether you call it Vote by Mail or Absentee Voting, in Florida the election system is Safe and Secure, Tried and True,” Trump tweeted on Tuesday. “I encourage all to request a Ballot & Vote by Mail! Florida’s Voting system has been cleaned up (we defeated Democrats attempts at change), so in Florida I encourage all to request a Ballot & Vote by Mail!”

Yes, the state known memorably for the “hanging chads” of 2000 and the Supreme Court decision that put George W. Bush in the White House had become the only state where Trump felt confidentl­y could handle mail-in balloting for president.

By midweek, Trump also changed his mind about Arizona, as reports mounted of Republican officials across the country who feared that his unsupporte­d claims of mass voter fraud were discouragi­ng more than Democrats.

After a visit with Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, Trump amended his earlier pronouncem­ent to praise mail-in voting in Arizona and bash Nevada. There Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak signed a bill that made his state the eighth that plans to mail every voter a ballot.

Trump is suing Nevada over the new law, saying in a burst of classic unsupporte­d Trumpian overstatem­ent that it will make it “impossible” for a Republican candidate to win the state.

Trump claimed falsely there “there’s no verificati­on of signatures” in Nevada’s process. Actually, like Arizona, Illinois and most other states, Nevada will continue to check mail-in voters’ signatures against the voters’ signatures on record after the ballot is mailed in.

Illinois voters must submit their applicatio­ns either by mail or in person to their local voting jurisdicti­on. For those who haven’t voted in recent years, applicatio­ns for each jurisdicti­on can be found at www. elections.il.gov/electionop­erations/ VotingByMa­il.aspx.

What’s truly unsettling about Trump’s obsession with mail-in voting is how much it reveals about how little he knows about how states elect presidents.

Yet he does show a keen grasp of what his base prefers. A recent CNN/ SSRS poll, for example, found that 59% of voters in Florida who “lean Democratic” said they would prefer to vote by mail ballot, compared with only 21% of Republican-leaning voters.

No wonder Trump hates mail-in ballots except when he doesn’t. For all his unsupporte­d talk about how this election amid the coronaviru­s pandemic will be the most “inaccurate and fraudulent election in history,” he seems pointedly unconcerne­d with how to make voting easier for those who want to avoid leaving their homes during a pandemic.

Worse he has stood idly by as concerns have mounted over the speed, funding and efficiency of the nation’s fast pivot to voting by mail this year.

The Brennan Center for Justice, for example, puts the price tag into the neighborho­od of a billion dollars for postage, tracking and other security measures. Yet the most recent coronaviru­s stimulus proposals by Kentucky’s Mitch McConnell and the Senate Republican­s he leads haven’t allocated a dime to beefing up for November.

Yet, Trump and his administra­tion appear to be more focused on defunding the Postal Service and the states that have expanded their absentee voting.

Compoundin­g the irony is the recent death of civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, celebrated nationwide for devoting his life — and risking it — to the cause of voting rights for all. That cause is the essence of democracy. It must continue, whether our president supports it every day or not.

After a visit with Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, Trump amended his earlier pronouncem­ent to praise mail-in voting in Arizona and bash Nevada.

 ?? AMY BETH BENNETT/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL PHOTOS ?? Workers move racks full of vote-by-mail ballots to be loaded onto trucks July 9 at the Broward County Voter Equipment Center in Lauderhill, Florida.
AMY BETH BENNETT/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL PHOTOS Workers move racks full of vote-by-mail ballots to be loaded onto trucks July 9 at the Broward County Voter Equipment Center in Lauderhill, Florida.
 ??  ?? Bins for mail ballot storage at the Broward County Voter Equipment Center in Lauderhill, Florida.
Bins for mail ballot storage at the Broward County Voter Equipment Center in Lauderhill, Florida.
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