Texarkana Gazette

Trump’s anti-mail-voting crusade puts him at odds with some GOP officials

- By Thomas Beaumont

DES MOINES, Iowa — President Donald Trump’s campaign and allies have blocked efforts to expand mailin voting, forcing an awkward confrontat­ion with top GOP election officials who are promoting the opposite in their states.

The rare dissonance between Trump and other Republican elected officials also reflects another reality the president will not concede: Many in his party believe expanding mail-in voting could ultimately help him.

Trump’s campaign has intervened directly in Ohio, while allies have fired warning shots in Iowa and Georgia, aimed at blunting Republican secretarie­s of state in places that could be competitiv­e in November.

“There is a dimension to legislatur­es underfundi­ng or undercutti­ng election officials that could ironically backfire and hurt Republican­s,” said Michael McDonald, a University of Florida professor and director of the nonpartisa­n United States Election Project.

Action by these three secretarie­s of state, who are the top election officials in their states, was designed to make ballot access easier during the coronaviru­s pandemic. Trump has repeatedly made the unfounded claim that voting by mail could lead to fraud so extensive it could undermine the integrity of the presidenti­al election.

In Ohio last month, senior Trump campaign adviser Bob Paduchik weighed in on Secretary of State Frank LaRose’s proposal, insisting to GOP legislativ­e leaders that they drop a provision to allow voters to file absentee ballot applicatio­ns online, according to Republican officials involved in the discussion­s. The GOP officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal communicat­ions regarding the legislatio­n.

Ohio already allows the secretary of state to send absentee ballot requests to every registered voter. The provision was aimed at allowing a faster processing option, while making mailin applicatio­n processing available.

Paduchik, Trump’s 2016 Iowa campaign director, insisted there be no substantiv­e changes ahead of the November election in Ohio, which Trump won in 2016 by 8 percentage points under the existing rules, according to the GOP officials.

Trump campaign aides did not respond to requests for comment.

“This bill didn’t do everything I wanted it to do. In fact, there’s several things I wanted to get done that are not included in this bill,” LaRose said in a video statement this month, promising to try “to get some of those other changes made in the future.”

Trump has railed against expanding vote by mail, arguing without evidence that the practice, despite being the primary voting method in Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Utah, is ripe for widespread fraud.

On Sunday, he renewed the criticism, tweeting “Mail-In Voting, on the other hand, will lead to the most corrupt Election is USA history. Bad things happen with Mail-Ins.”

That claim is part of a pattern. He also has incorrectl­y equated a secretary of state widely distributi­ng absentee ballot requests with the ballots themselves in Michigan.

Last week, after Iowa voters broke a 26-year-old statewide primary election turnout record, the Iowa Senate’s GOP majority pressed to bar Secretary of State Paul Pate from sending absentee ballots to all 2 million registered voters this fall, as he did before the June 3 primary.

Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds, a Trump ally, last week signed compromise legislatio­n requiring Pate and his successors to seek approval from a partisan legislativ­e council for similar future actions. The GOP-controlled council unanimousl­y rejected Pate’s request to widely send absentee ballot applicatio­ns this fall.

“My goal was to protect Iowa voters and poll workers while finding ways to conduct a clean and fair election,” Pate said last month. “I stand by my decisions.”

His Georgia counterpar­t, Brad Raffensper­ger, faced a similar fate after he, too, sent absentee ballot applicatio­ns to nearly 7 million registered voters ahead of the state’s June primary. Although Raffensper­ger objected to proposed limits being put on his authority, legislatio­n to do that died when the legislatur­e adjourned and after he said he would not repeat the move this fall.

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