Trump’s concern about mail-in ballots is completely legitimate
Mail-in voting: Your 2020 election guide during the coronavirus
May 28, 2020 at 11:53 a.m. MDT
No one questions that mail-in ballots have much higher rates of not being counted. A Massachusetts Institute of Technology study
found that in the 2008 presidential election, 7.6 million of 35.5
million mail-in ballots requested were not counted because they never
reached voters or were rejected for irregularities. That is a failure
rate of more than 21 percent. In 2008, it did not matter because the
election was not particularly close and mail-in ballots only accounted
for a fraction of votes cast. But imagine the impact that would have in a
close election in which mail-in voting is tried on a massive scale.
If mail-in ballots are adopted widely for the 2020 election, mass failures would be inevitable because about half the states
have either no or extremely limited vote-by-mail options, and thus lack
the experience or infrastructure for sending out, receiving or securing
millions of mail-in ballots. We’d be conducting an experiment of
unprecedented scale right in the middle of one of the most contentious
elections in U.S. history.
Moreover,
there is a huge difference between sending ballots to a small number of
citizens who request them and requiring that they be mailed to every
registered voter, as Democrats are demanding. Under the Democrats’ plan,
ballots would inevitably be sent to wrong addresses or inactive voters,
putting millions of blank ballots into circulation — an invitation for
fraud. Add to that the danger of what Democrats call “community ballot
collection” (a.k.a. “ballot harvesting”)
where campaign workers collect absentee ballots in bulk and deliver
them to election officials, and you have a recipe for disaster.
Democrats are already expressing concern
that Trump may not accept the results if he loses. So why would they
give him an excuse to do so? Maybe because Democrats don’t believe they
can win without mail-in voting. During a pandemic, only the most
motivated voters are going to show up at the polls, and Democrats have a
massive enthusiasm gap with Trump. A March Post-ABC News poll
found that just 24 percent of Biden supporters said they were “very”
enthusiastic about supporting him, which is “the lowest [level of
enthusiasm] on record for a Democratic presidential candidate in 20
years of ABC/Post polls.” By contrast, more than twice as many Trump’s
supporters — 53 percent — are “very” enthusiastic about supporting him.
While Trump voters would walk over broken glass to get him reelected,
Democrats are terrified their voters won’t get out of bed to vote for
former vice president Joe Biden. Solution? Let them vote from their
beds.
That could backfire. Democrats are concerned about African American turnout because covid-19 has hit the black community especially hard. But using mail-in votes may not work out the way they hoped. One recent study
found that in 2018, “black voters across Georgia’s 159 counties are
disproportionately more likely to have their [absentee] ballots rejected
than white voters.” If mail-in voting is attempted on a massive scale
in 2020, and large numbers of African American votes are not counted, it
may be Democrats who are crying fraud and claiming a violation
of the Voting Rights Act. If that happens, Democrats will regret going
on record insisting mail-in voting is perfectly safe.
Eight
years ago, the Times declared that “the flaws of absentee voting raise
questions about the most elementary promises of democracy.” Now that
Trump is raising those same questions, the publication says doing so is
illegitimate. It was right the first time.
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