The Mercury News

Why many in GOP disagree with Trump on mail-in voting

- By Doyle McManus Doyle McManus is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2020, Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

A confession: I voted by mail recently. And it didn’t feel dirty at all.

Like every voter, I had been warned against the practice by President Donald Trump.

“Mail-in ballots are very dangerous,” he said. “There’s tremendous fraud involved and tremendous illegality.

“You get thousands and thousands of people sitting in somebody’s living room, signing ballots all over the place,” he explained in April.

Busted! In our case, though, it was only three of us, not thousands. My wife, our daughter and I sat around a table, puzzled over the choices for Circuit Court and Board of Education, and shared a pen to sign the envelopes.

In our defense, we didn’t have much choice. In Maryland, where I live, our governor, a moderate Republican named Larry Hogan, decided that inperson voting would be too dangerous in a pandemic. Hogan closed most polling places and ordered counties to send mail-in ballots to every registered voter.

It seemed like a sensible precaution. But Trump objected so strongly that he threatened to block federal funding from Michigan and Nevada if they follow the same course. Both states have Democratic governors; oddly, he didn’t target any Republican­s.

There’s no real evidence to support the president’s frequent charge that mail-in ballots leads to fraud.

The only large-scale vote fraud in recent years happened in North Carolina in 2018, but the problem wasn’t mail-in ballots. It was “ballot harvesting,” which allows campaign workers to collect ballots door-todoor. The culprit was a Republican.

Every so often, though, the president mentions a political objection too.

A Democratic proposal to require mail ballots nationwide would produce “levels of voting that, if you ever agreed to it, you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again.”

Many Republican political strategist­s think Trump is right on that count — that if voting is made easier, more Democrats will participat­e.

Republican political consultant John Brabender said he believes mail-in voting will help Democrats because their voters turn out less consistent­ly, especially in cities.

But he worries that Trump is hurting his own party by denouncing mail voting so fiercely. In states that allow mail voting, GOP leaders have been urging the party faithful to participat­e, only to be denounced by Trump supporters as turncoats.

“If we spend all our time criticizin­g vote by mail, the results could become self-fulfilling,” he warned.

Ironically, voting by mail in its old-fashioned version, the absentee ballot, has traditiona­lly been a Republican specialty.

GOP leaders in California, Arizona, Florida and other states have long urged their supporters, especially older voters, to vote by mail. Trump used an absentee ballot to vote in Florida’s primary this year.

Republican National Committee Chair Ronna Romney McDaniel said she still favors absentee voting, just not universal ballot distributi­on. In other words, voting by mail is fine, just as long as it isn’t too easy.

But those nakedly political debates date from before the coronaviru­s made polling places hazardous to your health.

What are states to do this fall, when we could be contending with a second wave of the pandemic? In many states, even Republican governors are heeding the call for easy access to mail ballots, no matter what Trump says.

Ohio, South Carolina and West Virginia have all expanded absentee voting. Even Florida, where Trump votes, has maintained relatively permissive rules.

But mail-in elections will be costly for states and counties — not only from postage, but because they will need more people and machines to count millions of paper ballots.

House Democrats have passed a pandemic relief bill that includes $3.6 billion in election funding, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has said he intends to block the measure.

Governors and state election officials are already forming bipartisan coalitions to try to wrangle new funding from Congress.

Running a clean election by mail shouldn’t be hard. All it requires is funding, organizati­on and vigilance against fraud. But the president and his campaign seem bent on making it harder than it needs to be.

Maybe the president really believes everyone’s a cheater. Maybe it’s just noise to keep his supporters fired up. Maybe he’s laying the groundwork to contest the result if he loses.

Whatever the case, he’s not only underminin­g the legitimacy of the November election, he’s doing it in the midst of the worst pandemic in a century. No wonder so many Republican­s disagree with him for once.

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