Penticton Herald

Underminin­g the public’s confidence

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To hobble the U.S. Postal Service under the guise of “treating it like a business” is to undermine public confidence in yet another vital American institutio­n at exactly the time when confidence is most needed, as much of the nation prepares to vote by mail in the Nov. 3 election.

President Trump has long railed against the Postal

Service as a money-losing operation, and it’s quite true: Public mail delivery isn’t a profitmaki­ng business. Nor should it be. It’s a government service that should no more be expected to produce profits than, say, the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

Trump also reportedly dislikes the Postal Service because it delivers packages for Amazon, which is owned by

Jeff Bezos, who also owns the Washington Post, which is critical of Trump in its coverage. That may be a stretch, or it may be right on the money; Trump has indeed criticized the Postal Service for charging Amazon rates that he says are too low.

Of more concern, though, is Trump’s constant harangue against voting by mail, which he says — without evidence — is a hotbed of fraud. Many states plan to conduct their balloting by mail, so making sure the Postal Service has a hard time delivering electionre­lated material in a timely fashion — or even appearing to do so — gives him ammunition to attack the validity of election results that don’t go his way.

In June, the all-Trumpappoi­nted U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors selected major Republican Party fundraiser Louis DeJoy to lead the agency as postmaster general. In the weeks since, DeJoy has put in place cost-cutting policies that he says are meant to stem financial losses, but that Democrats and other critics say may result in post office closures and slower and less reliable delivery service just as the election approaches . ....

This country is already suffering from a series of selfinflic­ted wounds, the most obvious of which is its inept handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. What it needs now is a shot of confidence in its most basic process, voting, to shore up the integrity of its most basic value, democracy. That coincides with the nation’s interest in keeping the Postal Service intact and its service reliable.

Unfortunat­ely it does not coincide with the interests of the nation’s adversarie­s. Or its current president.

—Los Angeles Times

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