In the U.S. mail-in voting is a form of voting in which a ballot is mailed to the home of a registered voter who fills it out and returns it by postal mail or drops it off in-person at a voting center. Five U.S. states routinely conduct all-mail elections: Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington and Utah. In response to the Covid-19 pandemic four additional states—California, Nevada, New Jersey and Vermont—and the District of Columbia have pledged to mail out ballots to all properly registered voters for the November 2020 election.
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@4JNZ3C75yrs5Y
It should be left up to the States
@4ZCS6595yrs5Y
Yes, but it should be secure and worked on like arizona.
@8CS4GM75yrs5Y
No, changing the standard election process on such a wide scale mere months before an election, when there already exists examples of it causing issues on a small scale, is highly irresponsible. Perhaps in the future after the issues are worked out completely.
@88T9RGX4yrs4Y
Allow this to be decided at the state level.
@38NW3YZ5yrs5Y
Yes, but each ballot must be requested through a verification process akin to absentee-ballots.
@7GP32QV4yrs4Y
No, there is tremendous voter fraud associated with mail-in voting
@RichardYRodgers5yrs5Y
No, voting in person is a better way to maintain the security of our elections, and return to a paper ballot system.
@8BYLJPN5yrs5Y
No, this makes voter fraud much easier.
@8DKN43F5yrs5Y
Yes, but only once it is less risky and less fraudulent.
@riddlecongress5yrs5Y
Absolutely not. Mail-in ballots are proven to have massive vulnerabilities to abuse and fraud. Case in point the ballot harvesting in Minnesota for Ilhan Omar.
@8GM9ZSH4yrs4Y
No, because they can be easily messed with and rigged and the traditional way of voting is much more efficient.
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