The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Why doesn’t Trump stop mail-in voting?

- Jonah Goldberg Jonah Goldberg holds the Asness Chair in Applied Liberty at the American Enterprise Institute and is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

President Trump’s recent delaythe-election trial balloon on Twitter was resounding­ly denounced, and rightly so.

Indeed, so thorough was the repudiatio­n, including from top Republican­s, that the president backtracke­d a little. “I don’t want to delay,” Trump explained in a press conference to discuss the pandemic. “I want to have the election. But I also don’t want to have to wait for three months and then find out that the ballots are all missing, and the election doesn’t mean anything. That’s what’s going to happen.”

Although delaying the election is an abhorrent idea, contrary to what this country stands for, Trump does have a point about mail-in-voting. It could well be a disaster. What’s astounding (though not actually surprising) is that the president doesn’t want to do anything about it.

First, let me explain why Trump has a point. Although his claims of massive and systemic fraud are illfounded and irresponsi­ble, his point about the vote counting has merit.

New York City’s June 23 primary was — or rather, still is — something of a train wreck. About 10 times the normal number of voters cast their ballots by mail. The system was overwhelme­d. As of this writing, there’s still an undecided congressio­nal race 42 days after the voting was supposed to end.

I’m generally opposed to widespread voting by mail because I think Election Day is an important civic ritual, and early voting, particular­ly in primaries, can end up thwarting popular will. That opposition melts away during a pandemic, of course, but the fact is that mail-in balloting has never been tried on the scale that might be required come November.

The five states that are already vote by mail only — Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Utah — should be fine. But in other states it might be a hot mess. Not only could ballot-counting efforts be overwhelme­d, but the post office could be as well, causing ballots to be lost or excessivel­y delayed.

Many argue that Trump is making a tactical mistake in attacking mail-in balloting. Republican­s have spent years building up their vote-bymail operations, leaving Democrats far behind. Launching a campaign to discredit a system well suited to harvest votes from the disproport­ionately older and rural voters making up Trump’s base seems like madness.

On the other hand, as my colleague Sarah Isgur at the Dispatch notes, a hot mess could actually be in Trump’s interest. Absentee ballots are rejected — purely for technical reasons, such as failing to fill out a line on the form — at a higher rate than those cast in person. And if Democrats trust mailin balloting and Republican­s don’t, more Democrats are likely to vote by mail — and have more of their ballots rejected as a result.

In Wisconsin’s April primary, some 23,000 absentee ballots were thrown out. In 2016, Trump carried Wisconsin by 22,748 votes.

What’s remarkable, though, is that most of the conversati­on is about Trump’s political or psychologi­cal needs and not his obligation­s as president. It’s been made clear to him that moving the election is a non-starter. What’s his response? To preemptive­ly discredit the election results. Even his complaints about the problems with mail-in voting are couched not in his obligation­s as chief executive to see that the integrity of our elections be preserved, but in partisan grievance.

He’s tweeted about a “CORRUPT ELECTION” that will “LEAD TO THE END OF OUR GREAT REPUBLICAN PARTY.”

If Trump is so concerned about the legitimacy of the election, why not, you know, do something to assure the election is conducted properly?

There’s nothing stopping Trump from pushing a massive effort to, say, gear up the U.S. Postal Service to handle an increased volume of mail during the election period. Instead, the donor he appointed to run the USPS has eliminated overtime for postal workers, virtually ensuring delivery delays. Trump could also use the same emergency powers he’s used to acquire ventilator­s to buy secure ballot drop boxes for the states.

Instead he raised the possibilit­y of issuing an executive order to force states not to use vote-by-mail. As with moving Election Day, he has no such power.

Putting aside plausible theories that Trump is laying a foundation to claim he was robbed of re-election, his response is of a piece with his pandemic denial. Just as you can’t get the schools reopened or the economy revived without dealing with the pandemic, you can’t have a normal election by just pretending there’s no pandemic.

Predicting it will “just disappear” isn’t a strategy.

But rather than face that reality and take appropriat­e action, Trump prefers to carp as if his hands are tied — but his fingers are free to tweet.

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