On March 28, 2020,
the governor of New York announced that
he was delaying his state’s April election.
"I don’t think it’s wise to be bringing
a lot of people to one location."
18 other states had already delayed or modified
their spring elections.
"It would endanger public health to allow
thousands of people to assemble."
But the state of Wisconsin
made a different call.
"The only state to move ahead with its election."
"Polls, if you can believe it, are open in
Wisconsin this morning."
On April 7, voters in Wisconsin got in line,
waited for hours,
standing 6 feet apart,
wearing masks,
with some poll workers
in full protective gear.
One voter made a sign that seemed to sum up
the situation perfectly:
"People are calling it the photo of the year."
"Quote, This is ridiculous."
I was sitting with my cardboard in my lap,
I was like, “this whole thing is just ridiculous.”
The people who were supposed to be
making sure things are safe for us,
I felt like they kind of threw us
under the wagon, you know?
The next day, the governor of New Jersey announced
they were postponing their election too.
"I don't want a Wisconsin, where folks had to pick
between exercising their right to vote on the one hand,
and protecting their own personal health."
Wisconsin’s election highlights something
that the US really needs to figure out soon.
In November, there’s an election to decide
the next president.
But it’s highly unlikely that Covid-19 will
be over and done with by then.
We might even be dealing
with a second wave of it.
So, if public gatherings are a health risk,
how are you supposed to have an election?
I'm coming to you from the Roberts family
voting booth, here at my dining room table.
This is Dave. He’s at home in Seattle, Washington.
Dave’s done a lot of reporting on what he
says is a simple solution to how America can
vote during the pandemic.
Tens of millions of people in America vote
by mail now, every election. And it's fine.
Washington is one of the few states that runs
its entire election through the mail.
I think I've been voting by mail since I got
to Washington in 2000.
Everyone who's done it loves it.
Voting by mail basically works by taking two
important elements of voting:
Verifying your identity,
and filling out the ballot --
And moving them from a polling place,
to your home,
where the ballot gets mailed
a few weeks before the election.
And that has two really obvious benefits.
First:
You can take as much time as you want.
You have literally weeks to do
as much research as you want.
So when you fill that circle,
you're like,
I'm friggin’ voting.
I'm capital-V voting right now.
And second: Voting by mail takes away a lot
of the common reasons people don’t vote.
Being forced to take a day off work,
find someone to watch your kids, or take your
kids with you,
and go to a crowded balloting place,
hope that your name hasn't been struck
from some roll for some random reason,
wait for hours, three hours,
five hours, in line...
Voting by mail clears those hurdles.
And the effects are really easy to see.
In 2018, a county in western Nebraska got
permission from the state
to run their entire election by mail.
Every voter there got a mail-in ballot,
while voters in the rest of the state
voted the old-fashioned way.
Across Nebraska, voter turnout was 24%. But
in that one county, it was more than double that.
Turns out that making it easier to vote, means
more people vote.
On average, states with all-mail voting systems
have a higher turnout than other states.
A poll from April 2020 found that Americans
would overwhelmingly be in favor
of holding the next presidential election
entirely by mail.
But that still leaves a chunk who aren’t
sold on it.
One reason is fraud:
the possibility that your vote might be more
likely to get lost, stolen or coerced,
if you vote at home.
So I asked an expert on voting by mail
how serious and common a risk this is.
"It's exceedingly rare."
So I also asked someone who runs elections.
"No widespread or systematic voter fraud."
I asked a political scientist who’s an expert
on election data.
"It’s highly unlikely anyone is going to
steal your vote."
An election law expert...
"The concerns about voter fraud are way overhyped."
And an expert on voting rights.
"You are still more likely to be struck by lightning
than to find mail ballot fraud."
The reason vote-by-mail fraud is rare is that
even though, in theory, it's possible,
it's not very effective.
It helps to think in terms of "wholesale fraud"
vs. "retail fraud."
Election security experts worry
about wholesale fraud:
lots and lots of votes being tampered with at once.
So, if a bunch of people are voting on a machine,
you just have to hack the one machine,
and you have access to thousands of votes.
Wholesale fraud, with one point of contact.
They’re a lot less worried about
what they call "retail fraud":
votes that get tampered with one at a time.
I mean, it is possible that someone could
come by, and steal your ballot, fill it out,
sign your name to it, and mail it in.
And they thereby would have accomplished...
changing one vote.
But even if that does happen, vote-by-mail
systems typically give you a way
to track your vote and make sure it’s been counted.
"You can track your ballot like an Amazon package.
It does not get much more secure than that."
"You can actually go on our system and track it,
from when they receive it, when they verify the signature,
and when it’s ready to count.
If they haven’t returned that ballot, I guarantee
you that the voter picks up the phone
and calls those election officials."
"The checks and balances that are in vote-by-mail...
In California, there are stronger and stricter guidelines
on processing vote-by-mail
than there are on in-person voters.
To me, it's a much more secure process."
The same week that Wisconsin held its election,
the state of Georgia sent all its voters forms
that would let them request a mail ballot.
But Georgia’s Speaker of the House complained.
He said voting by mail benefits Democrats.
"This will be extremely devastating to Republicans
and conservatives in Georgia."
But there’s no evidence that voting by mail
is better for either party.
A study at Stanford found that it doesn’t
get either party a bigger share of either
turnout or the vote itself.
All it does is increase the number
of people who vote.
"We haven't seen any benefit
to one party over another."
"There's nothing political about voting and
more people voting is a good thing."
"Providing that all vote-by-mail experience
didn’t change those dynamics.
People were still voting the way they wanted to vote."
"I'm pretty sure I’m living proof that you
can elect a Republican in a blue state,
and you can do it in a vote-by-mail environment."
Every state in the US already has some kind
of vote-by-mail option:
It’s called an absentee ballot.
But some states will only give you one if
you have a good excuse,
like if you’re out of town or in the military.
Other states offer a no-excuse absentee ballot,
where you don’t need to give a reason.
But you still have to request it.
Voting by mail is something every state already
allows.
But very few states are actually prepared
to do an entire election through the mail.
That’s what caused the problem in Wisconsin.
In 2016, about 250,000 Wisconsin voters requested
an absentee ballot.
In 2020, about five times that number requested
absentee ballots.
Wisconsin hadn’t prepared for that.
So a lot of people never got their ballots.
And had to go vote in person instead.
I was one of over 55,000 people who had requested
an absentee ballot who had not yet received it.
I am desperately hoping that we can make
that an exclusive option,
if we're still dealing with
unsafe situations in November.
It would not be that difficult to ramp that
up in time for the election.
I mean, you'd need to start now.
It's not trivial, but it's very doable.
In the five states that have all-mail voting,
there’s still an option to vote in person:
A backup, mostly for people who didn’t get
a ballot, or weren’t registered to vote in time.
But in most, places voting by mail is the backup.
And if lots of voters feel that voting in
person isn't safe, a backup won't be good enough.
Preparing election systems for that will take
time. And right now, there is time.
But only if we start now.
