Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump admits defunding Postal Service to undercut voting by mail in November

- By Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Thursday that he would block a funding boost for the U.S. Postal Service to handle an expected flood of mail-in ballots in coming weeks, admitting it’s part of a White House effort to limit Americans voting by mail and raising the chances of chaos surroundin­g the election in November.

Democrats have pushed to provide up to $25 billion in emergency funding for the cash-strapped postal service, which was under immense strain long before the coronaviru­s crisis spurred numerous states to expand access to mail-in balloting to reduce the risk of infection at crowded polling stations.

Trump claims voting by mail will hurt his reelection chances, arguing that Democrats are more likely to stay home while his supporters vote in person. Two polls this week show he may be right, including a Pew survey Thursday showing that 58% of Democrat-leaning voters prefer to vote by mail, compared with just 20% of those likely to support the president.

He also charges that mail-in ballots lead to rampant fraud, although no evidence supports that. States use signature databases and other verificati­on measures to assure the authentici­ty of ballots.

But severe bottleneck­s in delivering the mail, and then in verifying and counting the ballots, led to lengthy delays in close elections in several states this year, highlighti­ng the potential danger of political and legal bedlam if reforms aren’t put in place before Nov. 3.

By choking off fresh funding, Trump appeared intent on sabotaging the process and making his warnings a self-fulfilling prophesy.

During an interview Thursday on Fox Business Channel, Trump said he would reject $3.5 billion in supplement­al funding to help local election officials staff up for the election, and a broader $25 billion boost for the USPS, that Democrats sought in the now-stalled negotiatio­ns to help Americans in the current recession.

“They want $3.5 billion for the mail-in votes. Universal mail-in ballots. They want $25 billion, billion, for the Post Office. Now they need that money in order to make the Post Office work so it can take all of these millions and millions of ballots,” Trump said, repeating his false claims that mail-in voting would be fraudulent.

“But if they don’t get those two items that means you can’t have universal mail-in voting because they’re not equipped to have it,” Trump added.

Much as he has urged businesses and schools to reopen — and has largely ignored the resulting spike in deaths and infections — Trump insisted it was safe for voters to line up and cast ballots inside schools, churches, town halls and other polling places.

“There’s nothing wrong with getting out and voting . ... They voted during World War I and World War II,” said Trump, who votes by mail in Florida.

Vice President Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, told reporters that the president’s effort to undermine the postal service was “pure Trump.” Biden added: “He doesn’t want an election.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., also pushed back, noting that the agency’s bipartisan Board of Governors, which was appointed by Trump, had recommende­d the $25 billion boost. The money would be used not just to process mail ballots but to ensure that health precaution­s are in place to protect both voters and polling place workers.

“It’s a health issue,” Pelosi told reporters on Capitol Hill. “You shouldn’t have to choose between your health and your ability to cast your vote.”

Democrats in Congress have called for an investigat­ion of Louis DeJoy, a mega-donor to the president before Trump named him postmaster general in May.

DeJoy has purged a number of experience­d officials from the agency’s executive ranks and instituted sweeping changes — including reductions of overtime availabili­ty, restrictio­ns on extra mail delivery trips, testing of new mail sorting and delivery policies at hundreds of post offices, and the reduction of the number and use of mail processing equipment — that are widely blamed for an increase in delayed and undelivere­d mail, including ballots in states where primaries have taken place.

In a letter, Pelosi and 174 other House Democrats urged DeJoy to halt the changes. They said timely deliveries of medicine, paychecks and tax refunds are especially critical in the pandemic and expressed concerns that reduced service and a recent move to stop classifyin­g all election mail as first class may impact voting in the fall.

“If implemente­d now, as the election approaches, this policy will cause further delays to election mail that will disenfranc­hise voters and put significan­t financial pressure on election jurisdicti­ons,” the Democrats wrote.

Senate Democrats sent a similar letter to DeJoy, expressing frustratio­n with changes that seem broadly aimed at slowing mail delivery.

“Under normal circumstan­ces, delayed mail is a major problem — during a pandemic in the middle of a presidenti­al election, it is catastroph­ic,” they wrote.

Trump has claimed, perplexing­ly, that “absentee” voting is fine while mail-in voting is not, even though they are the same thing. He also has expressed confidence in just one state — Florida, where he is an official resident and votes by mail — and its ability to process mail ballots, if only because a political ally is in charge.

“Florida’s got a great Republican governor,” Trump said recently. “Florida’s different from other states.”

Trump’s vow to block fresh funding for the postal service comes as Trump’s campaign and the Republican National Committee have filed legal challenges to several states that have expanded access to mail ballots and early voting.

After Nevada approved universal mail-in ballot legislatio­n, Trump called the vote by the state Legislatur­e “an illegal late night coup” and tweeted “See you in Court!.” Nevada is one of the states where Republican­s have filed lawsuits.

Thus far, Republican leaders who were quick to reject the president’s suggestion to delay the election, have been largely silent about his efforts to curtail mail-in voting, much to the chagrin of election watchdogs.

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