Mail-in Voting Reduces Faith in Our Elections

 

The 2020 election was a disaster for the republic. Lax voting procedures, last-minute rulemaking by unauthorized parties, and hundreds of accounts of process irregularities created such an atmosphere of suspicion and rancor that 60 percent of Americans of all parties believed the election to be basically illegitimate.

The hapless Trump team looked foolish by blaming rigged voting machines and international conspiracies. In fact, mail-in voting was at the heart of what went wrong.

Democrats, using the Covid epidemic as a wedge, were able to increase mail-in voting to 65%, up from 25% in 2016. Eligibility and security standards were relaxed. Registrants who had not previously voted were signed up to receive bulk mail ballots.

By the time Trump was raging about the “stolen“ election, the contest was over. Hundreds of thousands of ballots have been mailed into a security void, been returned and counted, and separated from any tracking information.

We’re supposed to believe that all these ballots, mailed to corrupted voted lists, were completed without improper influence by the intended voter only and that the ballot harvesters were simply trying to boost voter turnout without regard to partisan interest. Since fraud would leave no trace in this process, the Greek chorus (media) began their “no evidence of fraud” chant.

But simple reflection reveals that it’s a matter of how much, not whether. The evidence comes out in dribs and drabs, cascades of individual coincidences.

Squirrely counts of thousands of consecutive votes, almost all for one candidate, clumped together, unrealistically large number of “voters” compared to registrations and boxes of ballots suddenly available for accounting when needed are all explained most likely by millions of nonsecured ballots “out there.”

The ultimate security check for mail-in ballots is signature verification. But it defies common sense to claim that a minimally trained clerk checking signatures provides the same fraud protection as picture ID at the polls.

Actual signature verification of historical photographs, for example, requires great skill and expertise. The slapdash, subjective process used by election officials is biased towards acceptance. Simple testing has shown that it is easily gamed.

Yet the Left is working assiduously to make the system even less foolproof. In Georgia, Stacey Abrams, who registered 185,000 voters for the Senate runoff elections, bragged openly about the lack of signature verification once she had “eviscerated“ the “exact match“ standard.

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that ballots couldn’t be rejected at all based on signature comparisons. You might as well hang out an “Open for Fraud” sign.

State officials claim they have safeguards in place that provide complete fraud protection. But all they can know is their procedures were executed as prescribed and that the votes received were accurately counted. That hardly proves that all the non-secured ballots arriving by mail were valid.

The only available check on their work is the recount, which is nonsensical. Counting the same ballots, no matter their origin, over and over is unlikely to produce more accurate results.

Actual reform of mail-in voting would center on better vetting of voters on the front end of the process. Assuring that only properly identified, eligible voters receive and return ballots would be difficult, but the real problem is the Democrats won’t stand for it.

They’ve struck electoral gold. They elected a feeble, unpopular candidate with no particular platform with 81 million votes by circumventing the traditional methods used to persuade and enthuse voters. They’re not about to give it up.

So an Arizona proposal to clean up registration rolls by striking voters who hadn’t voted in two election cycles and didn’t respond to mail is being hysterically shouted down as “voter suppression.” Objectors to mail-in voting are lumped in with conspiracy theorists and stolen election rhetoric and then expected to share alleged responsibility for the Capitol riot.

Republicans may have no choice but to learn to play the game themselves. But America needs better.

We seem fated to have close, hyper-partisan elections. The losing side in the past two presidential elections has refused to accept defeat. In this toxic atmosphere. we will never find peace with an election process that constitutes an open invitation to fraud.

Published in Elections
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  1. Gossamer Cat Coolidge
    Gossamer Cat
    @GossamerCat

    It was a shame that Trump focused on the Dominion story at the expense of the type of fraud we knew went on and was pretty much untraceable and unstoppable after the fact.  Because if I wanted to cheat in an election, I would follow this pattern:  1)  Find a judge or secretary of state to make an illegal change to voting laws ahead of the election; 2)  Carry out election;  3) Claim that the results can’t be invalidated even if the change was found to be illegal because the people voting didn’t know it was illegal.   

    So they have opened the gates to all kinds of last minute manipulation secure in the knowledge that there isn’t anything that will be done once the vote is over. 

    • #1
  2. Hang On Member
    Hang On
    @HangOn

    But claiming that the results were in fact legitimate as many Republicans do simply means that this will continue. Add to this that the press anf polling are largely fraudulent and you have the perfect recipe for a one-party state. We’re all California unless you fight this.

    • #2
  3. David Foster Member
    David Foster
    @DavidFoster

    There are several layers of problems that can be & have been alleged about the election:

    1–direct counting errors or outright fraud in counting

    2–allowing counting of ballots that are definitely not eligible according to the rules in force

    3–changes to the eligibility rules in force without proper legal authority 

    4-media suppression of information that would quite likely have had a major impact on voting, such as the Hunter Biden laptop story.

    Even if one were to stipulate that everything was on the up-and-up from the standpoint of (1) (2) and (3), I don’t see how there can be any question but that (4) definitely *did* occur.  So those people who keep talking about how this was a ‘free and fair’ election are being disengenius or worse.  Maybe legal at the levels of (1) (2) and (3)…maybe, though there remain a lot of questions…but definitely not ‘fair’.

     

    • #3
  4. MarciN Member
    MarciN
    @MarciN

    The logic in this piece is troubling. With all of the voting problems outlined so carefully, it is hard to understand going from (a) this election was clearly screwed up and open to corruption, the amount of which can never be known–we might as well have skipped the entire process and just installed Biden because the deck was stacked before we started the game–to (b) something is wrong with Donald Trump and his supporters for being upset and not just accepting the “results.” In fact, I bet if the writer liked Donald Trump, he too would be upset about the way this election was conducted.

    • #4
  5. iWe Coolidge
    iWe
    @iWe

    The USPS, just this week, intercepted a credit card sent to one of my team. He received the package, neatly missing just the card itself.

    When I called the card company, the lady there and I joked that it was a good thing it wasn’t a ballot! Then we riffed on the theme, speculating that maybe we should led the thief use the card anyway, since we cannot prove he stole it. Maybe it was really his all along, and how dare we disenfranchise him? She kept saying, “I really shouldn’t say this, but…”

    • #5
  6. Weeping Inactive
    Weeping
    @Weeping

    MarciN (View Comment):

    The logic in this piece is troubling. With all of the voting problems outlined so carefully, it is hard to understand going from (a) this election was clearly screwed up and open to corruption, the amount of which can never be known–we might as well have skipped the entire process and just installed Biden because the deck was stacked before we started the game–to (b) something is wrong with Donald Trump and his supporters for being upset and not just accepting the “results.” In fact, I bet if the writer liked Donald Trump, he too would be upset about the way this election was conducted.

    And if the shoe had been on the other foot, so to speak, you couldn’t have kept the Democrats from yelling about it – the press too.

    • #6
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