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Voting by Mail May Not be the Answer to Long Lines, say Election Reformers

Voters in Orange County, Florida, wait on line for several hours at a polling station on Silver Star Road, November 6, 2012. (File photo: Lance Scurvin/WONO)
Voters in Orange County, Florida, wait on line for several hours at a polling station on Silver Star Road, November 6, 2012. (File photo: Lance Scurvin/WONO)

In his State of the Union address, President Obama returned to a point he’d made on election night: The need to do something about long voting lines. Obama announced his plan for a commission to “improve the voting experience in America.”

But often missing from discussions about how to make voting easier is the rapid expansion of absentee balloting. Letting people vote from home means fewer people queuing up at overburdened polling places. So why hasn’t vote-by-mail been heralded as the solution?

When it comes to absentee and mail-in voting, researchers and voting rights advocates aren’t sure the convenience is worth the potential for hundreds of thousands of rejected ballots.

Although Oregon and Washington are the only two states to conduct elections entirely by mail, absentee voting has expanded rapidly nationwide. Since 1980, the number of voters using absentee ballots has more than tripled. Roughly one in five votes is now absentee.

Twenty-seven states and the District of Columbia allow voters to request an absentee ballot for any reason, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. That’s up from the six states that did so in 1988, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts.

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1 COMMENT

  1. In Florida, in Orlando, we had so many problems with vote-by-mail that it may make things worse. When you vote in person, you know your vote is cast, or the machine rejects it. Not so with vote by mail which was discovered too late by hundreds of citizens.

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