The Mercury News

Trump is wrong. California mail-in voting is safe, secure

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. ©2020 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

President Donald Trump probably would prefer that California’s mail ballots be delivered by ox cart. Or carrier pigeons flying through flocks of raptors.

Unless we voted for him. Then he’d dispatch the military to “harvest” the ballots.

Hey, it’s not that far-fetched. After all, this is the president who tried to withhold disaster relief money from Northern California wildfire victims because the state opposed him politicall­y, according to Miles Taylor, the former chief of staff at Trump’s Department of Homeland Security.

Only public and political pressure forced Postmaster General Louis DeJoy to postpone further cutbacks in the Postal Service until after Nov. 3 to “avoid even the appearance of any impact on election mail.”

“I don’t, frankly, trust the postmaster general,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters in San Francisco. “If he’s sincere about it, it means the bully has backed off.”

Trump rants about alleged massive voter fraud in mail voting when studies have shown it is very rare, if it exists at all. The hypocrite is a mail voter himself at his Florida golf resort.

Trump’s true motive was voiced on “Fox and Friends” in April when he said that if the GOP agreed to widespread mail voting, “you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again.”

In a recent Fox News interview, Trump said he opposed pumping $25 billion into the struggling Postal Service — as requested by Democrats and the service’s board of governors — because the money would be used to handle the expected deluge of mail ballots.

“They need that money in order to have the post office work so it can take all of those millions and millions of ballots,” the president said. “If they don’t get (the money), that means you can’t have universal mail-in voting.”

California is pretty close to already having universal mail voting. In the March primary, 72% of our ballots were cast by mail.

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic,

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered every active registered voter to be sent a mail ballot. Many voters will fear it’s too dangerous to show up on Election Day.

Well, with roughly 21 million ballots being mailed out, what’s to prevent a few hundred thousand from drifting into unintended hands and misused? What happens when the voter no longer lives at that address?

The ballot is returned to the county voter registrar, Secretary of State Alex Padilla says. It’s not forwarded.

Can’t anyone grab an unmarked ballot off a kitchen table, fill in the boxes and mail it in? Sure, but the voter has to sign the envelope and the signature is routinely double-checked against one on file. Yes, every signature is checked, Padilla insists. It’s the law.

One of the newest Democratic strategies is so-called ballot harvesting. It was a huge success for Democrats in 2018. A voter — often elderly and frail — can hand over a ballot to someone else to deliver to an official drop box or polling place.

But what if the harvester feels it isn’t a politicall­y friendly ballot and tosses it in the trash?

“No voter should hand over a ballot to anyone he or she doesn’t trust or doesn’t know,” says Fresno County voter registrar Brandi Orth, president of the California Associatio­n of Clerks and Elections Officials. “That’s just basic.”

A fear for November is that an avalanche of mail ballots near Election Day will overwhelm the troubled Postal Service and the envelopes won’t be postmarked in time to be counted. They need to be postmarked by Nov. 3.

Don’t wait until Election Day to mail it, Orth advises.

“That’s dangerous. The post office is putting out the message to send back ballots no later than a week before the election.”

That shouldn’t be hard. There’s hardly anyone who doesn’t already know how they’ll vote. For most California­ns, it won’t be for the incumbent who wants to deny them mail ballots.

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