The Clock Is Ticking On Shifting Voting Practices For General 2020 Election
Turnout was expected to break records in November, but with two-thirds of Americans saying they're scared to go to the polls and states not moving quickly enough to adapt to mail-in voting, election officials worry about what the general election is going to look like. Meanwhile, 2020 Democratic frontrunner Joe Biden raises significant doubts that the Democratic National Convention will happen as planned. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump is relying on approval of his response efforts to help him in the election, but what do the polls say?
Time is running out to allow millions of Americans to vote this fall without fear of contracting the novel coronavirus. Mail voting 鈥 the voting method that best preserves social distancing 鈥 is infrequently used in many states, and those that don鈥檛 have extensive mail voting might be unable to implement systems before November. And while 33 states, including most 2020 presidential battlegrounds, already allow any voter to cast a ballot by mail who wants to, a number of those states aren鈥檛 prepared to handle the crush of mailed-in ballots that could be coming their way in November. (Montellaro, 3/31)
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday suggested vote-by-mail capabilities should be scaled up ahead of 2020鈥檚 remaining elections, shielding Americans from the threats in-person voting could pose amid the coronavirus pandemic. 鈥淚n terms of the elections, I聽think that we鈥檒l probably be聽moving to vote by mail,鈥 Pelosi told MSNBC鈥檚 鈥淢orning Joe,鈥 adding that congressional Democrats had pushed to allocate increased funding in the recent $2 trillion relief package 鈥渢o get those resources聽to the states to facilitate the聽reality of life: that we are going to have to聽have more vote by mail.鈥 (Forgey, 3/31)
Americans are coming to grips with the fact that there will聽be no聽quick end to the coronavirus crisis 鈥 a realization that will shake up the 2020 presidential race in profound ways. President Trump has sought to shift expectations in recent days, acknowledging that the de facto shutdown of the nation鈥檚 economy will last longer than he had originally hoped and that the death toll will likely climb far higher. (Stanage, 3/31)
Joe Biden raised significant doubts about whether the Democratic National Convention will be held as planned in July, with the likely nominee suggesting that the party鈥檚 major gathering slated for Milwaukee may need to be altered or postponed. When asked whether he could envision holding the convention in July, given the coronovirus outbreak and concerns about large gatherings, Biden said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to envision that.鈥 (Viser, 4/1)
Democratic presidential front-runner Joe Biden has quietly expanded his lead over President Donald Trump among registered voters, even as the rapidly spreading coronavirus has all but sidelined the former vice president鈥檚 campaign, according to a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll released on Tuesday. The poll conducted on Monday and Tuesday of more than 1,100 American adults found that 46% of registered voters said they would support Biden if he were running against Trump in the Nov. 3 election, while 40% said they would vote for Trump. That advantage of 6 percentage points was up from a 1-point lead for Biden recorded in a similar poll that ran from March 6 to 9. (Kahn, 3/31)
Justin Penn, a Pittsburgh voter who calls himself politically independent, favored Joseph R. Biden Jr. in a matchup with President Trump until recently. But the president鈥檚 performance during the coronavirus outbreak has Mr. Penn reconsidering. 鈥淚 think he鈥檚 handled it pretty well,鈥 he said of the president, whose daily White House appearances Mr. Penn catches on Facebook after returning from his job as a bank security guard. 鈥淚 think he鈥檚 tried to keep people calm,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 know some people don鈥檛 think he鈥檚 taking it seriously, but I think he鈥檚 doing the best with the information he had.鈥 (Gabriel and Lerer, 3/31)
More voters say the Trump administration isn鈥檛 doing enough to combat the coronavirus outbreak, according to a new POLITICO/Morning Consult poll. The survey, conducted immediately before President Donald Trump announced a 30-day extension of his physical and social distancing guidelines 鈥渢o slow the spread鈥 of Covid-19, shows 47 percent of voters feel the administration isn鈥檛 doing enough in response to the outbreak, greater than the 40 percent who feel the administration is doing the right amount. (Shepard, 4/1)
If he had done nothing at all, President Donald Trump said Tuesday, the American death toll from the coronavirus would be geometrically higher than the low six-figure count he now expects. In other words, it could have been worse. Looking like he'd been visited by the ghosts of hometown past and election future, Trump deviated from his typically ebullient, brash and optimistic style to deliver a somber message much more in line with that of his leading scientists. (Allen, 3/31)
The coronavirus pandemic is wreaking havoc on Wisconsin鈥檚 upcoming statewide election, one of the only presidential primaries still scheduled in April. The state is facing a huge shortage in poll workers ahead of Tuesday鈥檚 vote. Local elections officials may have to close and consolidate precincts to manage the situation, and some are warning of steep drops in turnout. State officials are urging voters to request absentee ballots so they don鈥檛 have to vote in person, but there isn鈥檛 the time or resources, or the appetite among state legislators, to just send ballots or even ballot request forms to all voters, the plan adopted by some states postponing their elections. (Montellaro, 3/31)