Chattanooga Times Free Press

ACT NOW TO ENSURE A SAFE ELECTION

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Even as some states and localities are reopening businesses and public spaces, it is likely that the COVID19 pandemic will still be with us in November when Americans will elect a president, the entire membership of the U.S. House and more than a third of the U.S. Senate.

It is past time for Congress to require states to expand opportunit­ies for voting by mail and early voting — and to help pay for those changes — so that Americans on Nov. 3 aren’t faced with a choice between protecting their health and exercising the most important right of citizens in a democracy.

Congress included $400 million for state election systems in a coronaviru­s stimulus package approved in March. But that sum falls far short of what is required to make it possible for states — especially those that lack experience with extensive voting by mail — to prepare for an election in which most votes might have to be cast by that method.

The House passed a new coronaviru­s relief bill last Friday that would give state election systems $3.6 billion to respond to the pandemic — a sum much closer to estimates by outside election experts of what will be required to conduct elections during this crisis. But Congress must act quickly; according to an analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice, states will have to start preparing this month if they’re going to be ready for voting by mail in the fall.

It’s also important that states take precaution­s to protect the health of voters who will cast their ballots in person, an option that must remain for disabled voters and those with unreliable mail delivery. Generous arrangemen­ts for early voting will reduce congestion at polling places, and election officials also must be prepared to sanitize those locations to protect the health of voters and poll workers.

Shoring up election systems to respond to the pandemic should be a bipartisan cause. But while some Republican governors recognize the importance of expanding voting by mail, Republican­s in Washington haven’t risen to the occasion. Some GOP senators have expressed concern about a “federal takeover of the election process.”

Alarmism about a “federal takeover” of elections ignores the Constituti­on’s instructio­n that, while states are responsibl­e for the “time, places and manner” of congressio­nal elections, Congress may “at any time make or alter such regulation­s.” Congress also has legislated regulation­s for presidenti­al elections. It would be shameful if Republican­s refused to exercise that authority to make it easier for Americans to vote during a public-health crisis. But then, the GOP in recent years has been the party trying to make it harder to cast a ballot.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minnesota, who along with Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, introduced a separate bill to help states expand voting by mail, suggested that there could be negotiatio­ns with Republican­s if they showed interest, though she said she would oppose any provisions that would suppress the right to vote.

Some compromise­s might be acceptable. While the problem of fraud in absentee voting is vastly exaggerate­d, occasional abuses have occurred. Some Republican­s might be willing to support expanded voting by mail in exchange for a requiremen­t that states minimize the possibilit­y of fraud and error, including by placing limits on so-called “ballot harvesting,” the collection and delivery of multiple ballots by activists or party members. That’s a reasonable compromise.

Members of Congress of both parties have recognized that the COVID19 contagion requires new thinking. If the damage inflicted on the economy by the virus justified a massive federal response, so does the threat the pandemic poses to democracy. Time is running out.

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