The Murky Effects of Mail-In Voting

Elections

Harry Enten offers some pieces of evidence suggesting (although not proving) that expanding mail-in voting hasn’t had a strong pro-Democratic effect on election outcomes, and that restricting it wouldn’t have a strong pro-Republican effect. The lesson he draws is that “it’s not at all clear Republicans will succeed in helping their electoral prospects” by enacting new limits on mail-in voting.

If he’s right, though, it also means that the progressive fear that Republicans will entrench their power by limiting mail-in voting is off-base. I recently wrote about this fear, and some other reasons for thinking it’s overwrought.

Articles You May Like

CNN Doesn’t Challenge Iranian FM On His Embassy Hypocrisy
Trans Runner Obliterates Competition in Oregon Race to Nobody’s Shock
Israel using AI to commit mass genocide in Gaza with little, if any, human oversight
NewsGuard Maintains NPR’s Perfect Rating Despite Berliner’s Suspension, Resignation
Biden backs House supplemental bills on Ukraine, Israel, Indo-Pacific

Leave a Comment - No Links Allowed:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *