Postal delivery disruptions and the fragility of voting by mail: Lessons from Maine

Since the onset in early 2020 of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, mail-in voting rates in states that have held elections have surged, presumably reflecting the fact that voting by mail is a relatively safe mode of ballot casting during a public health crisis. Matters of health notwithsta...

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Main Authors: Michael C. Herron, Daniel A. Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-01-01
Series:Research & Politics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168020981434
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spelling doaj-f370befbec8f4835ac2d9a823f213df52021-01-18T23:33:30ZengSAGE PublishingResearch & Politics2053-16802021-01-01810.1177/2053168020981434Postal delivery disruptions and the fragility of voting by mail: Lessons from MaineMichael C. Herron0Daniel A. Smith1Dartmouth College, USAUniversity of Florida, USASince the onset in early 2020 of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, mail-in voting rates in states that have held elections have surged, presumably reflecting the fact that voting by mail is a relatively safe mode of ballot casting during a public health crisis. Matters of health notwithstanding, postal delivery disruptions can place mail-in ballots at risk of rejection on the grounds of lateness. With Maine as a case study, we show that, in the past four general elections, over 10% of vote-by-mail ballots arrived at local elections offices either on Election Day itself or one day earlier. Moreover, of the vote-by-mail ballots most vulnerable to postal delivery disruptions, a greater share of them were cast by unaffiliated voters and Democrats than by Republicans. Our results highlight the fragility of voting by mail in light of concerns about the reliability of the United States Postal Service. While existing research shows that the opportunity to vote by mail is neutral with respect to partisanship, our results highlight an aspect of mail-in balloting that nonetheless has a partisan hue—the extent to which vote-by-mail ballots are vulnerable to mail delays.https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168020981434
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael C. Herron
Daniel A. Smith
spellingShingle Michael C. Herron
Daniel A. Smith
Postal delivery disruptions and the fragility of voting by mail: Lessons from Maine
Research & Politics
author_facet Michael C. Herron
Daniel A. Smith
author_sort Michael C. Herron
title Postal delivery disruptions and the fragility of voting by mail: Lessons from Maine
title_short Postal delivery disruptions and the fragility of voting by mail: Lessons from Maine
title_full Postal delivery disruptions and the fragility of voting by mail: Lessons from Maine
title_fullStr Postal delivery disruptions and the fragility of voting by mail: Lessons from Maine
title_full_unstemmed Postal delivery disruptions and the fragility of voting by mail: Lessons from Maine
title_sort postal delivery disruptions and the fragility of voting by mail: lessons from maine
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Research & Politics
issn 2053-1680
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Since the onset in early 2020 of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, mail-in voting rates in states that have held elections have surged, presumably reflecting the fact that voting by mail is a relatively safe mode of ballot casting during a public health crisis. Matters of health notwithstanding, postal delivery disruptions can place mail-in ballots at risk of rejection on the grounds of lateness. With Maine as a case study, we show that, in the past four general elections, over 10% of vote-by-mail ballots arrived at local elections offices either on Election Day itself or one day earlier. Moreover, of the vote-by-mail ballots most vulnerable to postal delivery disruptions, a greater share of them were cast by unaffiliated voters and Democrats than by Republicans. Our results highlight the fragility of voting by mail in light of concerns about the reliability of the United States Postal Service. While existing research shows that the opportunity to vote by mail is neutral with respect to partisanship, our results highlight an aspect of mail-in balloting that nonetheless has a partisan hue—the extent to which vote-by-mail ballots are vulnerable to mail delays.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168020981434
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