The Columbus Dispatch

Fact check: Mich. governor encourages ballot drop off

- Anna Staver and Camille Caldera

The claim: Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer told voters not to mail their ballots

Election Day is less than a week away.

Given concerns about abnormal mail delays, voters across the country are starting to ask whether it’s already too late to drop their ballots in the mail.

Joy Gaines-friedler shared a message on Oct. 19 that she claimed contained an answer — straight from Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

“From Governor Whitmer: As of today - do NOT mail-in your ballots,” she wrote on Facebook. “Please take them to a drop-off box, or to your clerk’s office.”

What did Whitmer actually say?

Gaines-friedler told USA TODAY that the post was a paraphrase of remarks Whitmer gave at a private fundraiser held on Zoom.

She clarified that Whitmer did not explicitly tell voters not to mail their ballots, as her original post implied. Rather, she “said only ‘We’re asking you now to drop-off your ballots rather than mail them,’” Gaines Friedler explained.

Whitmer’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

But it’s true that the Democratic governor has encouraged voters to deliver their absentee ballots in-person since mid-september.

“If you can, don’t drop your ballot in the mail but go ahead and take it directly to your clerk’s office,” Whitmer told WWJ Newsradio on Sept. 16. “That’s an easy way to ensure that your ballot gets counted.”

Just this week, Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson encouraged the one million voters who have not returned their absentee ballots to take that ballot directly to their clerk or put it in the appropriat­e drop box.

“We are too close to Election Day, and the right to vote is too important, to rely on the Postal Service to deliver absentee ballots on time,” Benson wrote in a statement on Tuesday. “Citizens who already have an absentee ballot should sign the back of the envelope and handdelive­r it to their city or township clerk’s office or ballot drop box as soon as possible.”

Is it too late to vote by mail?

That depends on whereyou live. Mail delivery times vary between states and counties. They have also been slowed during the pandemic.

An investigat­ion by USA TODAY mailed packages and letters in different states to test delivery times and saw the greatest number of delays in Michigan.

An analysis by the Washington Post of mail delivery times in battlegrou­nd states, including Michigan, also showed the U.S. Postal Service failed to deliver some first-class mail on time. (On-time delivery is defined as one to three days.) In Detroit, about 29% of mail for the week ending Oct. 9 arrived late.

Different states also have different rules about how they countabsen­tee ballots arriving after Election Day.

The rule in Michigan was one of several that ended up in court.

At first, a lower court ruled that ballots postmarked by Nov. 2 could be counted up to two weeks after Election Day. But an appeals court reversed that rule — so in Michigan, only absentee ballots received by 8 p.m. on Election Day will be counted.

That’s a large part of why Democrats like Whitmer have pushed voters to hand-deliver their ballots to county clerks or drop boxes, per the Detroit Free Press.

For rules specific to each state, select the state and check the “Deadline To SUBMIT A Mail-in Ballot” on NPR.

Despite state-by-state differences, experts concur that it’s too late to vote by mail.

A postcard from the U.S. Postal Service itself advised voters to “mail your ballot at least 7 days before Election Day,” per the Washington Post.

Likewise, David Fineman, chair of the nonpartisa­n Fair Elections Center and a former chair of the Board of Governors of the USPS, told NPR that voters who have not yet mailed their absentee ballot should not do so.

“Voters who have not mailed the ballot as of this date should not mail their ballots and should find another means to vote,” he said.

That’s even more true in the over two dozen states, including Michigan, where ballots must be received by Election Day, Nov. 3, to be counted.

Our rating: Missing context

We rate the claim that Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer told voters not to mail their ballots MISSING CONTEXT, because it could be misleading without additional context. Whitmer has repeatedly urged voters to deliver their ballots in person rather than relying on the mail, but the user behind the post confirmed thatwhitme­r did not explicitly tell voters not to mail their ballots. This week, the Michigan Secretary of State’s Office also saidvoters who have absentee ballots should “hand-deliver it to their city or township clerk’s office or ballot drop box as soon as possible.” Likewise, experts nationwide concur that it’s too late to rely on the mail.

Our fact-check sources:

h WWJ Newsradio, Sept. 16, Whitmer Urges Voters To Skip The Mail And Deliver Absentee Ballots By Hand To Local Clerks

h Michigan Secretary of State’s Office, Oct. 27, NEWS RELEASE: Benson: Too late to rely on United States Postal Service for absentee ballots

h USA TODAY, Oct. 21, We mailed 64 letters, packages in battlegrou­nd states to check on mail delays. Here’s what we found

h Washington Post, Oct. 20, Key swing states vulnerable to USPS delays

h Detroit Free Press, Oct. 27, Michigan voters: 1 million absentee ballots not yet returned as Election Day nears

h NPR, Oct. 14, Map: Mail-in Voting Rules By State — And The Deadlines You Need

h Washington Post, Oct. 27, Amid USPS delays, election experts and campaigns weigh in: Don’t mail your ballot

h NPR, Oct. 28, It May Be Too Late To Mail Back Your Ballot. Election Officials Stress Other Options

Thank you for supporting our journalism. You can subscribe to our print edition, ad-free app or electronic newspaper replica here.

 ?? AP ?? Jane Fisher holds her absentee ballot while waiting in her car with her brother, Anthony, for the doors to open to the Election Center for absentee early voting for the general election in Sterling Heights, Michigan, on Thursday.
AP Jane Fisher holds her absentee ballot while waiting in her car with her brother, Anthony, for the doors to open to the Election Center for absentee early voting for the general election in Sterling Heights, Michigan, on Thursday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States