Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ARKANSANS vote no, say post office bill political stunt.

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

Arkansas congressme­n opposed legislatio­n Saturday that would prevent U.S. Postal Service officials from taking steps to “reduce … or impede prompt, reliable and efficient” mail delivery service.

The measure included $25 billion in funding for the agency, which has been a frequent target of criticism by President Donald Trump.

The Democratic-backed bill passed 257-150, with support from 26 Republican­s. Twenty-three Republican­s didn’t vote.

The four House members from Arkansas, all Republican­s, portrayed the legislatio­n as unnecessar­y.

“Obviously it’s a political stunt,” said U.S. Rep. Rick Crawford of Jonesboro.

The post office is capable of delivering the millions of ballots that will be cast by mail this year, he said.

“There are roughly 471 million pieces of mail per day handled by the U.S. Postal Service,” he said. Mail-in voting would take place over a 30-day period and would likely lead to about a 1% surge per day, he said.

If the post office can handle Mother’s Day and Christmas holiday deliveries, it can handle Election Day, Crawford said.

“I just think this is another attempt [by Democrats] to try to create an anti-Trump narrative. I just don’t think they have a whole lot of faith in their own ability to win an election without using extraneous means like this type of propaganda,” he said.

U.S. Rep. Bruce Westerman of Hot Springs also called the legislatio­n unnecessar­y.

“It’s just a political ploy by the Speaker [Nancy Pelosi] that has nothing to do with the election. I think it’s all made up,” he said. “The post office has plenty of money. They have the capacity to handle the ballots for the election. So this is an opportunit­y the speaker saw to poke at the president.”

U.S. Rep. Steve Womack of Rogers portrayed Saturday’s proceeding­s as an unmerited attack on Trump.

“The chairman of the Rules Committee called this a five-alarm fire. Now that the Democrat convention has concluded, and the Republican convention is about to begin, we have a catastroph­e,” he said.

Womack portrayed it as yet another attempt by Democrats “to derail a duly elected president.”

“About the only outcome this debate is going to have today is one of entertainm­ent value. Nothing substantiv­e,” he said.

Once Womack had finished, the Rules Committee chairman, U.S. Rep. James McGovern, D-Mass., provided a rebuttal.

“I’m sad that the gentleman thinks that this is entertaini­ng. We have veterans who are calling our offices whose medication­s have been delayed getting to them. We have some people on Social Security and on SSI who are worried that their checks are not going to get to them. We have small businesses that are calling to complain. This is a crisis that this administra­tion produced all on its own,” he said.

U.S. Rep. French Hill of Little Rock portrayed recent testimony by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy as persuasive.

DeJoy discussed “the changes that he’s made and the preparatio­n he has for handling ballots. That convinced me that he had all the personnel that he needed to do that, he had all the equipment he needed to do it,” Hill said.

The post office also has the financial resources it needs, Hill said.

“We gave him $10 billion in March that he hasn’t spent. He has a $10 billion line of credit at the Treasury, plus he has $14-plus billion dollars on his balance sheet,” Hill said.

“If there’s not a money issue, and there’s not a policy issue, I don’t know why we came back to Washington to vote today,” he said.

Hill’s Democratic opponent, state Sen. Joyce Elliott of Little Rock, said she would have supported the legislatio­n, based on the informatio­n she has seen.

“The USPS is an essential institutio­n of our democracy, so it must be supported to work for all of us, including seniors and veterans who depend on delivery of medication­s and small businesses who depend on the USPS for essential deliveries, for example,” she said in a text message.

Celeste Williams of Bella Vista, Womack’s Democratic opponent, also said she would have supported the legislatio­n.

“Certainly the post office has been made into a mailin voting issue but really is a needed service and is mandated by the Constituti­on, as well,” she said. “Lots of seniors, veterans … lots of normal folks get their prescripti­on medication­s through mail pharmacies.”

If the post office can handle Mother’s Day and Christmas holiday deliveries, it can handle Election Day, Crawford said.

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