San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

VIRUS, MAIL-IN VOTING MAY MEAN AN ACCELERATE­D 2020 ELECTION

Earlier voting presents challenges to campaigns

- BY ALEX ROARTY & DAVID CATANESE Roarty Catanese write for Mcclatchy Washington Bureau.

The political calendar says Joe Biden and Donald Trump have, as of today, exactly 100 days left to convince Americans they’re the right man to be president.

In reality, both have far less time before many voters make their decision.

The 2020 election is widely expected to feature a higher concentrat­ion of votes cast before Election Day than any modern presidenti­al election, driven by rule changes that have loosened restrictio­ns on early absentee voting and a pandemic that has scared many people from casting their ballots in person.

In many key battlegrou­nd states, millions of voters are expected to submit their ballots in September — while nearly all of them could see a surge of votes as many as four weeks ahead of the big day.

The earlier voting will challenge campaigns for both Biden and Trump, testing their ability to adapt to the newfound conditions while reaching out and educating their voters about how to now cast ballots.

For Trump, trailing Biden by double-digits in some national polls of the race, early voting could truncate the amount of time he has left to stage a comeback, underscori­ng the need for him to begin making up ground on the former vice president sooner rather than later.

“You don’t want to be peaking the fourth week of October,” said David Plouffe, who managed Barack Obama’s 2008 presidenti­al campaign. “You want to make sure all the things you want to have said really are out by the end of September.”

“A bunch of people will have voted by the first debate,” he added, referring to an event scheduled for Sept. 28 at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana.

Of the six core presisin dential battlegrou­nd states, five of them — North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia, Wisconsin, Michigan and Florida — will begin sending absentee ballots to voters who requested them in September. As soon as the ballots are received, voters can return them through the mail. The lone state that won’t allow voters to submit ballots in September, Arizona, begins early voting and sending absentee ballots through the mail on the same day, Oct. 7.

No battlegrou­nd state lets voters submit their ballot sooner than North Carolina, which will begin shipping mail-in absentee ballots to people who requested them on Sept. 4, nearly two full months before Election Day. Mike Rusher, a Republican operative there, expects absentee balloting to swell from about 5 percent of the total vote in the last general election to nearly 30 percent, which means voters can expect more intensive outreach in August and September.

“Early money spent will be of great benefit now,” Rusher said.

In Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin, mail-in ballots skyrockete­d during this year’s primaries by more than four times the number in 2016. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf of Pennsylvan­ia is leading a public education campaign to let his constituen­ts know that applying to vote by mail takes as long as making the bed or preparing a bowl of cereal.

Voting early has been a key feature of recent presidenti­al elections, and the challenge that poses to each presidenti­al campaign is, at a certain level, nothing new. But what’s changed this year is an electorate, worried about contractin­g coronaviru­s, showing a deep aversion to the traditiona­l process of casting a ballot at a local polling place, favoring instead to submit their ballot through the mail.

The effect of that aversion has already been dramatic. In Wisconsin’s April primary, held during a surge of COVID-19 cases in the state, 60 percent of voters voted absentee through the mail, according to Reid Magney, a spokesman for the WisconElec­tions Commission.

Normally, he said, absentee voting through the mail makes up about 6 percent of the vote.

But moving to a mail-in system presents risks. For instance, in Wisconsin, one analysis found that an estimated 23,000 primary ballots were thrown out because voters missed at least one line on the form, rendering them invalid.

“Those numbers from the primary scare me. That’s a lot of votes to be spoiled in an election,” said Plouffe, who urged Democrats to embark on a full-fledged campaign to inform voters of all that’s required to make sure ballots are converted into actual votes. “If it’s a state where postage is required, make sure they’re aware of that. If it’s a state where they have to sign both the ballot and the envelope, they’re aware of that. The deadlines. It is just a really high degree of difficulty.”

Trump’s assertion that a mail-in surge would lead to “the most corrupt vote in our nation’s history,” has undoubtedl­y made it more difficult for Republican­s to fully embrace and emphasize the process. Biden even predicted this week that Trump would use it as an excuse to “steal the election.”

Glen Bolger, a GOP pollster, said in one recent survey of a battlegrou­nd state, he found that 27 percent of all voters reported they planned to vote by mail. But of those 27 percent of all voters, fully 75 percent planned to support Biden — compared to just 15 percent who said they would back Trump.

Waiting until Election Day to vote is risky, the pollster said, because unexpected events could thwart someone’s plan to cast their ballot, and even reductions in turnout could have big consequenc­es.

“That’s something you have to work to fix, because you don’t want to leave votes on the table because there’s a spike in the virus right around election time, or there’s a patch of bad weather,” Bolger said.

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