The Vote And Voting Problems, Pre-Election Day 2020
Very jealous of this Vice News analysis. It finds that about 21,000 Election Day polling places will not be open this year — a 20 percent decrease from the 2016 election. The closure of in-person polling places was a big problem during the primaries this year, leading to long lines in places with the most severe consolidation — often cities and communities of color. The most famous example of this was the Wisconsin primary, when Milwaukee went from 180 polling places to just five and saw hours-long lines as a result.
However, the fact that many states are closing polling places doesn’t automatically mean there will be problems. A lot depends on the exact number of polling places being closed and where they are located (i.e., there is a strategic way to close polling places). Most states are closing fewer than 20 percent of polling places, and assuming those closures are efficiently spread out, that shouldn’t cause too many problems. Some states, like Maryland and Kentucky, will also have voting super centers in large sites like sports arenas that can process many voters at once — so even though there are fewer voting locations, the ones that remain should have higher capacities. And states like California, New Jersey and Vermont are consolidating many polling places but also switching to an all-mail election, so demand for in-person voting should be way down. States like Washington and Colorado that have voted by mail for years typically open only a handful of in-person voting locations and experience few problems.
Reader Question: Will Early or Mail Ballots Be Counted After Election Day Votes?
Dylan Doherty from Hamtramck, Michigan: I understand that Democrats are more likely to vote absentee/mail-in, but why would that lead to a “red mirage”/”blue shift”? Are in-person ballots all counted first and then absentee ballots? Why would that be?
The short answer is that it depends on the state. But it’s true that some states may see a “blue shift” or “red mirage” based on how their votes are counted, because some will count Republican-leaning Election Day votes before many Democratic-leaning mail ballots. After all, we know that mail ballots will be disproportionately more Democratic — in 19 states where there’s party registration, around 51 percent of mail or in-person early votes have been cast by registered Democrats, compared with just about 26 percent by Republicans, based on data from Michael McDonald at the University of Florida. However, the count pattern will vary from state to state, and some could initially have more Democratic-leaning results that then trend Republican.
Pennsylvania is a battleground state that might see a notable shift in a Democratic direction, in part because election officials cannot begin processing mail ballots until the morning of Election Day. As such, we can probably expect most Election Day votes to be counted that night, but we can’t know for sure how many mail ballots will have been tallied. A large number of mail ballots will have already been returned, which could help officials get into a position to count a sizable share of them. But the vote count was very slow in some parts of the state during the June presidential primary, and even with that experience under their belt, election officials will have far more ballots to count in the general election. And there’s little question that mail ballots are going to lean heavily toward Biden, as recent Pennsylvania polls have shown that around three-fourths of voters who plan to vote by mail or who have already voted back Biden.
However, other states could actually see a “red shift” as their counts wear on. Florida begins processing mail ballots 22 days before the election, and state law requires county election officials to report all tabulated early and mail ballots within 30 minutes of polls closing, which is 7 p.m. Eastern in most of the state. So the early rush to send in mail ballots this year could mean that a huge Democratic-leaning tranche of ballots will be reported fairly early on Election Night and ahead of many Republican-leaning Election Day ballots. The final result could then come down to whether a Democratic lead will hold up, instead of a Republican one like in some other states.
Update On Iowa
On Wednesday, Iowa’s state Supreme Court upheld a Republican-backed law that prevents county elections commissioners from filling in missing information on absentee ballot request forms using voter registration data. Instead, commissioners must contact voters to fix the forms themselves. It’s the latest Republican victory in the state after a previous ruling invalidated tens of thousands of ballot request forms that had been sent to voters with their information already filled in, deciding that those applications should have been sent to voters blank.
