Lodi News-Sentinel

Wait weeks to tally November’s votes? Ex-official says that ‘could be generous’

- By Niels Lesniewski

WASHINGTON — This week’s key primary contests in Kentucky and New York have provided yet more evidence that Election Day will last beyond the first Tuesday in November.

In both states, the abundance of absentee ballots that did not need to be received by Tuesday is leading to lengthy delays in reporting of election results, putting campaigns in a kind of suspended animation.

New York and Kentucky both accepted ballots as long as they were postmarked by election day, and the numbers of absentee voters surged because of precaution­s taken in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. Ballots can be received as late as Saturday in Kentucky and June 30 in New York.

Joe Burns, a former deputy director at the New York State Board of Elections, said the counting of absentee ballots in November could take even longer.

“I think weeks could potentiall­y be generous if you’re talking about the number of absentee ballots in a given race going from, say, 4 or 5% to 40 or 50 percent,” Burns told reporters Wednesday. “If you go and increase the number of absentee ballots by a factor of 10, you would think it’s going to take that much longer.”

Burns noted that in states like New York, there is no need to tabulate results for many unconteste­d primary races.

New York Democratic Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo used emergency powers related to the pandemic to effectivel­y implement noexcuse absentee voting for the primary, and there’s no reason to think that will change in November.

“Come November, you’re going to have every Democrat, every Republican, every independen­t entitled to vote, and if the governor continues ... the order that every voter is entitled to an absentee ballot should they be afraid of contractin­g the coronaviru­s, you’re looking at a massive number of absentee ballots to count,” Burns said on a press call, which was organized by Lawyers Democracy Fund.

Priorities USA, a Democratic outside group, has legal challenges to ballot return deadlines in Florida, Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, arguing against potential disenfranc­hisement.

“The unique challenges we’ve witnessed in recent primaries is an illustrati­on of why we thought it was so important to fight not only to ease or eliminate restrictio­ns on vote-bymail but to advocate for safe in-person voting. Since the beginning of the pandemic, we’ve understood that the health crisis would further overwhelm elections officials, and what we’re seeing is a reflection of that,” Aneesa McMillan, the director of strategic communicat­ions and voting rights at the group, said in an email.

McMillan added that there are ongoing concerns about limited voting hours and reduced numbers of polling places for in-person voting as a result of the pandemic-related restrictio­ns.

Kentucky allowed no-excuse absentee voting for the first time this week, a result of bipartisan negotiatio­ns between Democratic

Gov. Andy Beshear and Republican Secretary of State Michael Adams.

There, it will likely be impossible to call the closely watched Democratic primary to take on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell until results are reported from Louisville and Lexington, and full results are not expected until June 30.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States