The Oklahoman

North Carolina kicks off mail voting as requests spike

- By Bryan Anderson and Nicholas Riccardi

RALEIGH — Mail balloting in the presidenti­al election is set to begin Friday as North Carolina starts sending out more than 600,000 ballots to voters — responding to a massive spike in requests that has played out across the country as voters look for a safer way to cast ballots during the pandemic.

The 643,000 ballots requested in the initial wave in North Carolina were more than 16 times the number the state sent out at the same time four years ago. The requests came overwhelmi­ngly from Democratic and independen­t voters, a reflection of a new partisan divide over mail voting.

The North Carolina numbers were one more bit of evidence backing up what experts have been predicting for months: Worries about the virus are likely to push tens of millions of voters to vote by mail for the first time, transformi­ng the way the election is conducted and the vote is counted.

In 2016, just one-quarter of the electorate cast votes through the mail. This time, elections officials expect the majority of voters to do so. Wisconsin has already received nearly 100,000 more requests than it did in the 2016 election. In Florida, 3,347,960 people requested ballots during the 2016 election. The state has already received 4,270,781 requests.

While ballots go out in two weeks in other battlegrou­nds like Minnesota, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin, all eyes are on North Carolina as it leads off.

Wake County, which includes the capital city of Raleigh, accounts for more than 100,000 absentee ballot requests so far. This week, the office groaned under the twin stresses of record mail voting and the pandemic.

On Thursday, workers in yellow vests and masks sat at folding tables spaced apart in a county warehouse, affixing address labels to envelopes and then putting the ballots inside. Board of Elections Director Gary Sims said the pandemic presents new challenges for the workers, including staying spaced out and using hand sanitizer as much as possible.

“We're already at over three times the amount of requests that we've ever had in its entirety in an election. So that's caused us to change some of our business processes,” Sims said.

The increase in interest has come with an increase in partisan division.

The GOP has historical­ly done well in North Carolina mail voting, but this year the people asking for the ballots are not generally Republican­s. Democrats requested more than 337,000 ballots, and independen­ts 200,000, while only 103,000 were sought by Republican­s. Voters in the state can continue to request the ballots up until Oct. 27, though that may be too close to the Nov. 3 election for them to receive the ballot and return it to their local elections office in time.

The Democratic lead in mail ballots isn' t only in North Carolina. In Maine, 60% of requests for mail ballots have been made by Democrats and 22% by independen­ts. In Pennsylvan­ia, Democrats have requested nearly triple the number of absentee ballots as Republican­s. In Florida, where the GOP once dominated mail voting, 47.5% of requests have come from Democrats and 32% from Republican­s.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] [NATI HARNIK/ ?? A person drops applicatio­ns for mail-in-ballots into a mailbox Aug. 18 in Omaha, Neb.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] [NATI HARNIK/ A person drops applicatio­ns for mail-in-ballots into a mailbox Aug. 18 in Omaha, Neb.

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