Hamilton Journal News

Voter outreach led to massive drop in rejected mail ballots

- By Christina A. Cassidy SUDHIN THANAWALA / AP FILE

ATLANTA — The coronaviru­s pandemic triggered an unpreceden­ted surge in mailed ballots last year, raising concerns that a flood of first-time absentee voters would lead to another record: more ballots tossed out for missing deadlines, signatures or other reasons.

Those fears never materializ­ed. An analysis by The Associated Press found that the rate of rejected ballots was actually lower in November than during last year’s primaries in several politicall­y pivotal states despite an increase in the number of absentee ballots cast.

In one of the most striking instances, Wisconsin saw both a decline in rejection rate and the overall number of ballots tossed out. During the state’s chaotic primary at the start of the pandemic, Wisconsin rejected roughly 23,000 absentee ballots compared with about 4,000 ballots in November even as the number of absentee ballots rose from just shy of 1.2 million in the primary to nearly 2 million.

Election officials and voting experts attribute the declines to extensive voter education campaigns; work by volunteers to help find voters and fix ballot issues; and myriad efforts to make absentee voting easier, including new ways for people to track their ballots. Concerns about U.S. Postal Service delays also played a role, motivating voters to return ballots early or take advantage of a fleet of drop boxes that were deployed for the election.

Despite this success, Republican lawmakers in several states have invoked former President Donald Trump’s unfounded claims of election fraud to propose limits on absentee voting. For instance, a push in Georgia would eliminate no-excuse absentee voting, requiring people to give a reason.

Analysis: Rejection rate down in Ohio

In the weeks following the election, Trump seized on preliminar­y reports of lower rejection rates in Georgia and Pennsylvan­ia — states he lost. But the AP analysis shows November rejection rates also declined in Ohio, Florida and North Carolina — states Trump won.

Ohio’s rejection rate declined from 1.35% in the primary to just 0.42% in November. Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a Republican, credited more user-friendly voting materials and requiremen­ts that local election officials call and email voters about ballot problems, rather than just notifying them by mail. Absentee ballots represente­d 36% of all votes cast.

“All of those things that we did helped to reduce the error rate,” said LaRose. “And that’s a really big success story — that we had massive absentee voting and a tiny number of errors.”

Election officials are paying attention

Election officials and voting experts pay close attention to ballot rejection data because it represents, in most cases, people who were unable to vote successful­ly. Newly registered, Black, Hispanic and younger voters have had their ballots rejected at higher rates than white and more experience­d voters, according to research by University of Florida political scientist Daniel A. Smith.

For its analysis, the AP sought 2020 ballot data from swing states: Ohio, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia,

Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin. In nine, it found the mailed ballot rejection rate declined. Pennsylvan­ia said data was not yet available, and Arizona noted its numbers were preliminar­y. Of the states, Colorado sends mail ballots to all registered voters and about 75% of Arizona voters are on a permanent early voting list and automatica­lly receive ballots in the mail.

“It’s not that something bad didn’t happen when we worried something bad would happen. It’s that we did all this hard work to stop the bad thing from happening,” said Sylvia Albert with Common Cause, one of several groups assisting voters who encountere­d problems with mail ballots.

In a few states, election officials implemente­d extensive ballot-tracking and notificati­on systems while various organizati­ons mobilized volunteers to track down and help voters whose ballots were flagged for rejection. North Carolina and Georgia were among the states where groups made a concerted effort to reduce rejections.

For the presidenti­al election, a joint effort by state Democrats and the

Biden-Harris campaign involving thousands of volunteers knocking on doors and working phones reached nearly 16,000 people who ultimately fixed their ballots, Draper said.

In Florida, nearly 73% of voters whose ballots were initially flagged for rejection successful­ly fixed their ballots, according to a new analysis by Smith.

Florida’s rejection rate was just shy of 0.3% in November, down from about 1.3% in the primary.

The U.S. Elections Project has estimated that 65 million people cast mail ballots in the 2020 general election, nearly double the 33.3 million in 2016.

Paige Weber, a freelance editor in Atlanta, was among the first-time absentee voters. Weber, who has diabetes, was worried about contractin­g the coronaviru­s at her polling place. She also was concerned about using the mail to return her ballot, so she opted for one of the more than two dozen drop boxes her county had set up.

She was impressed with how easy — and safe — the process was.

“Even when the pandemic is over, it was just so quick,” Weber said.

 ??  ?? Christin Clatterbuc­k leaves an affidavit and informatio­n about fixing absentee ballots on the door of a home in Stone Mountain, Ga., in Nov. 2020.
Christin Clatterbuc­k leaves an affidavit and informatio­n about fixing absentee ballots on the door of a home in Stone Mountain, Ga., in Nov. 2020.

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