'Epic failure': U.S. election officials warn of November chaos due to
budget crunch
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[July 10, 2020]
By Jason Lange and Simon Lewis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Michigan town
wants machines to speed up counting of absentee ballots. In Ohio,
officials want to equip polling places so voters and poll workers feel
safe from the coronavirus. Georgia officials, rattled by a chaotic
election last month, want to send voters forms so they can request
absentee ballots more easily.
In all three cases, the money is not there to make it happen, say local
officials responsible for running elections in the states - any one of
which could determine who wins the Nov. 3 presidential election.
Presidential nominating contests held this year in states from Wisconsin
to Georgia have exposed massive challenges in conducting elections
during the worst public health crisis in a century. Closed or
understaffed polling venues led to long lines, there were problems
delivering absentee ballots, and the votes took days, even weeks, to
count.
But instead of receiving more money for the all-important contest
between Republican President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden,
officials face budget cuts after tax revenues plunged in the
virus-stricken economy, two dozen election officials across several
battleground states told Reuters.
The consequences, they warn, go beyond practical headaches to the risk
voters' faith in the process will be undermined.
"What kind of price tag are you going to put on the integrity of the
election process and the safety of those who work it and those who
vote?" said Tina Barton, the city clerk and chief elections official in
Rochester Hills, Michigan, a state where Trump beat Democrat Hillary
Clinton in 2016 by fewer than 11,000 votes. "Those are the things at
risk."
This year's nominating contests have shown that voting in the pandemic
age costs more: Officials have to buy masks, face shields and other
equipment to virus-proof polling places. They also must spend more to
mail and count ballots.
Many officials say they don't have the funding to do either job
properly. Election experts say Americans are likely to vote in record
numbers in November, when control of Congress will also be up for grabs
along with state governorships and legislatures.
A funding shortfall could lead to "widespread disenfranchisement," said
Myrna Perez, director of the elections program at New York University's
Brennan Center for Justice, a non-partisan public policy institute. "We
run the risk of people really questioning the legitimacy of the
election."
Congress approved $400 million in federal funding to help states hold
the elections as part of the CARES Act coronavirus aid package passed in
March - that's just one-tenth of the $4 billion that experts at the
Brennan Center have estimated will be needed this year to hold safe and
fair elections during the pandemic.
Introducing a vote-by-mail system in new locales will require officials
to pay for new paper ballots and thick security envelopes, and to buy
expensive new machines to sort and tabulate them. Postage alone will
cost nearly $600 million, the center estimated.
A fresh coronavirus aid bill passed in May in the Democratic-led House
of Representatives includes $3.6 billion in new election funding for
state and local governments. Some Republicans said they were open to
considering more election funding, but opposed planned rules to make
states boost mail-in voting, and the bill has no chance of passing the
Republican-controlled Senate.
Trump and his Republican allies say mail voting is prone to fraud and
favors Democrats, although independent studies have found little
evidence of those claims. Democrats say efforts to discredit mail
balloting, coupled with a possible fall in polling venues, could depress
turnout.
Hans von Spakovsky, a former Republican member of the Federal Elections
Commission who works at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said
officials could cut costs by focusing on keeping polling places safe,
rather than trying to ramp up voting by mail.
"I'm not saying that this is easy but it is not going to be as difficult
as all these people are predicting," von Spakovsky said.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell declined to comment.
Amy Klobuchar, the senior Democrat on the Senate rules committee that
oversees federal grants for elections, told Reuters money was so short
that funds intended for election security, for instance, were being used
to buy masks and cleaning supplies.
"That's not a one-or-the-other choice. We need voters to be safe and we
need our elections to be secure," she said.
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Jocelyn Bush, a poll worker at the Edmondson Westside High School
Polling site, cleans each station after a ballot is cast, during the
special election for Marylands 7th congressional district seat,
previously held by Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-MD), in Baltimore,
Maryland, U.S., April 28, 2020. REUTERS/Tom Brenner
"EPIC FAILURE"
Some local governments are already squeezing election budgets, as
cities across the country face a projected $360 billion revenue loss
over the next three years due to the coronavirus outbreak.
Georgia sent absentee ballot requests to all voters ahead of its
June 9 elections, which officials cited in local media estimated
would cost at least $5 million. The program helped fuel record
primary turnout in a state that has long been solidly Republican but
which polls show could be competitive in November.
Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, told state
lawmakers late last month there was not enough money to do the same
for November, and that the health crisis "has somewhat dissipated."
He instead will ask voters to request their ballot through a
website. Raffensperger's office declined to comment on the funding
shortages, or on a rapid rise in COVID-19 cases in Georgia since
then.
Most county governments in Georgia don't have the money to send out
requests themselves, said Deidre Holden, co-president of the state's
association of county election officials.
"If Congress doesn't act we are going to see epic failure once
again," said Holden, an independent, who is also elections
supervisor in Georgia's Paulding County, a Republican-dominated
suburb of Atlanta.
In Philadelphia, falling revenues have left an election budget of
$12.3 million, instead of $22.5 million that officials proposed in
early March. The city's vote could be critical: Pennsylvania is a
state where Trump won by less than a percentage point, and about a
fifth of its registered Democrats live in Philadelphia.
The city expects about $750,000 in CARES Act grant money, but it
already spent more than its expected grant holding its June 2
primary, its top election official, Commissioner Lisa Deeley, told
Reuters.
LaVera Scott is director of elections for Ohio's Lucas County, a
Democratic-leaning area including Toledo in the battleground state
that elected Democrat Barack Obama twice, but voted for Trump in
2016. Local officials asked her to cut her budget by 20%, and she
has ruled out buying some safety equipment such as Plexiglas sneeze
guards for more than 300 polling stations that the county hopes to
operate.
"Feasibly, that's not a cost that we can do here," she said.
Scott also worries about not having enough staffing. Elderly polling
workers are sending her apologetic greeting cards to say they won't
do the job this year for fear of catching the virus, she said.
RESULTS? "WHO KNOWS WHEN"
Voting rights advocates and election experts have been warning for
months that a chaotic election could cause voters to question the
results. Worse, if those results are delayed, a candidate could
claim victory prematurely.
Without further federal funding, some election boards in Michigan
won't be able to buy new machines to count ballots faster, or cover
all the postage costs of mail-in ballots, Secretary of State Jocelyn
Benson told Reuters.
She told U.S. House lawmakers in June that the state needs $40
million from the federal government, far above the $11 million
allocated to the state under CARES Act.
"This means ... that election results may not be available until
long after election night," Benson, a Democrat, said in an emailed
statement.
Michelle Anzaldi, the clerk for Michigan's Pittsfield Charter
Township, a suburb of Detroit, said her current vote-counting
machines take between three and five seconds to count each ballot. A
newer model can process more than 100 a minute but could cost more
than $100,000.
With a budget crunch looming, the count will just have to wait.
"Instead of being tabulated by 10 p.m. at night, it could be who
knows when," she said.
(Reporting by Jason Lange and Simon Lewis, Additional reporting by
Richard Cowan; Editing by Soyoung Kim and Sara Ledwith)
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