The Day

Perspectiv­e:

- By MATTHEW J. MALLOW and JAMES D. ZIRIN Matthew J. Mallow handles legal affairs and regulatory compliance for BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager. James D. Zirin is a lawyer, public TV talk-show host and author. They wrote this for Bloomberg Opi

Plans to boost absentee and mail-in voting in the 2020 campaign have become a controvers­ial topic. How much do you know about these options for avoiding a visit to the polls? Test your knowledge with today’s quiz.

Republican­s and Democrats alike want fair elections in which we can all be confident that every vote will be counted. We can ensure the integrity of our democracy and simultaneo­usly simplify voting by adopting a practice already used by many states: universall­y available drop-box voting.

Drop boxes could be placed throughout the U.S. at each polling place, when it is open for voting during early or extended voting or on Election Day. And, if election authoritie­s made ballots available for pick up as well as deposit, even better, as more people will be encouraged to vote. This is not simply about voting logistics. It is a prescripti­on for expanding electoral participat­ion while diminishin­g the reliance on the foundering U.S. Postal Service.

In Senate testimony Aug. 21, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy assured Congress he is “extremely highly confident” that if you mail your ballot at least seven days before the election, it will arrive on time. The problem is, many states permit voters to request a mail-in ballot right up to Nov. 3. In that case, the Postal Service warns your ballot might not get counted.

In the 2016 presidenti­al election, only about 60% of the eligible voting-age population voted. Although the number of eligible voters has increased as the population has grown, the proportion who cast ballots in presidenti­al elections hasn’t varied by more than a few percentage points over the past 50 years. Combining our proposal with the many other efforts to facilitate voter registrati­on this year would give reason to hope that on this Election Day many more citizens would exercise their most fundamenta­l right.

This election year is unique. Because of the coronaviru­s crisis, the majority of voters may well prefer to vote by mail rather than risk their health by waiting in lines at crowded polling places. Mail-in and absentee ballots are not ordinarily a factor in national elections, but this year they could prove decisive. Election rules are governed by state law. And in the seven battlegrou­nd states of Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin there are laws that mail-in ballots, even if postmarked prior to Nov. 3, will be ignored if received by the election authoritie­s after that date. Drop-box voting eliminates the uncertaint­y of timely receipt of mail.

Drop-box voting has already been used with no discernabl­e problems in many states. Connecticu­t, Maryland, Michigan and Washington, to name just a few, have adopted drop-box voting as a convenient alternativ­e to in-person voting. There is much experience across the country demonstrat­ing their safety and security.

In Connecticu­t the drop boxes can be used both to submit an applicatio­n for an absentee ballot and to submit the completed ballot. Applicatio­ns are being sent to all registered voters.

If each polling place across the nation had ballots available for distributi­on to voters, it would reduce the six-step process of mail balloting to two steps. Today, voters may need to request an applicatio­n for mail balloting, complete and submit the applicatio­n, wait to receive the ballot, then complete the ballot and mail it with fingers crossed that it will arrive in time.

Under our proposal, registered voters who do not wish to go to the polls in person, for fear of contractin­g covid-19 or otherwise, could personally obtain a ballot with a brief stop at their neighborho­od polling place when it is open for voting. States could also mail ballots early to registered voters as New York did without incident in the recent primary. Voters could then deposit them at a local drop box on or before Election Day.

To assure the security of drop boxes, they could be policed by security guards or local law enforcemen­t. Election officials could collect the ballots at regular and frequent intervals as already happens in those states that have embraced drop-box voting.

If the election office provides the boxes, this all could be quite easy. If a state does not provide drop boxes, voters would have to go for it, put on a mask, go inside and hand their ballot to an election clerk. Presumably the lines for dropping off ballots would be shorter than for in-person voting, if the drop-off period extended over multiple days. The voting transactio­n in that case would be speedier than filling out long ballots at the polls themselves. The director of elections in Denver says she calls mail-in voting “ballot delivery” because “most voters actually return their ballots in person, as opposed to using the post office to mail it back.”

Our self-governing democracy will not profit from a protracted legal battle over the role of the post office in voting or the integrity of mail-in ballots. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer has observed that judges do a bad job in deciding elections. President Donald Trump’s adviser Jared Kushner said that all the president wants is a “fair election.” Drop-box voting would make it happen.

The right to vote in a fair and honest election is a precious asset of the American society, not to be squandered or undermined. Author Anne Applebaum fears we are in a global “twilight of democracy” with a seductive drift toward authoritar­ianism. Let’s hope it doesn’t happen here.

Drop-box voting has already been used with no discernabl­e problems in many states. Connecticu­t, Maryland, Michigan and Washington, to name just a few, have adopted drop-box voting.

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