The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Another new pandemic reality? Election gets shaken up

- By Mike Catalini

TRENTON » Add voting to the list of routines shaken up by the coronaviru­s pandemic this year.

Labor Day marks the unofficial end of summer and the traditiona­l kickoff to campaign season, though many already have been closely watching electoral politics for months. New Jersey is embarking on its firstever mostly mail-in general election, but Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy’s plans for balloting face a legal challenge from President Donald Trump’s campaign.

That injects some uncertaint­y into what voting will look like: Could the federal judge hearing the case side with the Trump campaign and order traditiona­l, in-person voting at machines?

The case has yet to be heard, and that has led

Democrats, Republican­s and political experts to advise voters to think about how they’ll cast their ballot regardless of the outcome.

“I think it’s really important that every voter has a plan for what they’re gonna do,” said Micah Rasmussen, the director of the nonpartisa­n Rebovich Institute for New Jersey Politics at Rider University.

Murphy ticked off four options: vote by mail; drop your ballot in one of at least 10 drop boxes per county, take your mail-in ballot to a polling place on Election Day, or vote provisiona­lly in person on Nov. 3.

Republican Assembly Leader Jon Bramnick, who said he wants the state to permit traditiona­l in-person voting at a booth, had one word of advice: “Vote.”

He added that people could hold onto their ballots until Election Day if they wanted to wait for the chance at traditiona­l voting — which isn’t guaranteed and is not currently an option. Or they could follow one of the options Murphy outlined.

A guide to this November’s election in New Jersey:

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