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If Your Time is short
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It takes time to accurately count ballots to produce unofficial results, particularly in states with large numbers of mail ballots and close contests.
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To speed the counting, some states could set laws that provide more time for local election officials to process mail ballots. Some states allow weeks of processing while others don’t allow that process to begin until Election Day.
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Voters play a role, too. When thousands of voters submit their mail ballots at the last minute, it creates a backlog for local election officials.
This question has been bouncing around the internet: If Florida can count ballots in a matter of hours, why does it take days for less populous states to do the same?
Local election officials in some states were still counting ballots days after Nov. 8. The margins in prominent statewide races were too close to call in Nevada and Arizona — including U.S. Senate races that could determine the balance of power in Congress.
Election officials say their top priority isn't speed but accuracy; they want to ensure all eligible ballots are counted by state deadlines for official results, often weeks after Election Day. But some states have laws that prevent them from getting to mail ballots sooner.
Efforts by election officials and the media to educate the public about the reasons for dayslong counts have not silenced the clamoring for faster results.
What would it take to accelerate election results without significantly reducing voter access?
We asked that question of current and former elections officials and experts.
"The number one suggestion that I would make: Allow election officials to start the processing and canvassing of their ballots before Election Day," said Ion Sancho, the former elections supervisor in Leon County, Florida. "That's how Florida gets it done."
Here are the solutions we learned.
An election worker tabulates ballots at the Clark County Election Department on Nov. 9, 2022, in Las Vegas. (AP)
Align mail ballot request deadlines with postal standards. The U.S. Postal Service advises that ballots be mailed back one week before they are due. That gives the postal system plenty of time for delivery, said Tammy Patrick, a former Maricopa County elections official.
But there are close to 20 states that allow voters to request ballots during that time period, which delays the ballots from getting into election workers’ hands, said Patrick, who now works for the Democracy Fund.
Allow for earlier processing of mail ballots. Some states, including Arizona, Nevada and Florida, allow workers to process mail ballots weeks before Election Day. (Florida’s statewide races were called by media outlets quickly because they were settled by landslides, but some ballots were still being counted there days later.)
But other states, including Pennsylvania, lag behind by not allowing that process to begin until Election Day.
Mail ballots take more time to process than in-person ballots because officials must open envelopes, flatten ballots, verify signatures and ensure that ballots aren’t torn or damaged so they can be scanned into tabulators.
Michele Forney, who works for the Elections Group, an organization with election administration expertise, said it would take a team of six people to open thousands of ballots a day when she was elections director in Pinal County, Arizona.
"All of that takes a tremendous amount of time," Forney said. Unless you see the process of opening the ballot envelopes, prepping the ballots for tabulation and setting aside damaged ballots to be duplicated, "you don’t necessarily know that."
For more than a year, county officials in Pennsylvania have asked state lawmakers to change the law so that they can start counting mail ballots three weeks before Election Day, rather than the current 7 a.m. Election Day start. It hasn’t happened.
Earlier mail ballot receipt deadlines: Setting earlier deadlines for voters to return mail ballots would speed the process, although voting rights experts caution that it would disenfranchise some voters who prefer to wait until the last day.
The most common deadline for receipt of mail ballots is Election Day. Arizona can accept them until 7 p.m.
California allows mail ballots to arrive a week later. if postmarked by Election Day (Statewide races in California favor Democrats, so it draws less scrutiny than states where the outcome is less certain).
In Nevada, mail ballots must be received by 5 p.m. on the fourth day following the election if postmarked by Election Day. This year, that day is Nov. 12. Nevada allows voters to fix issues with their ballots, such as forgetting to sign the outer envelope, by Nov. 14.
"We couldn't go any faster now even if we wanted to," Clark County Registrar of Elections Joe Gloria said Nov. 10.
More funding for local elections offices. Local election offices are chronically underfunded. Many need more money for more staff, equipment to process mail ballots and larger spaces to store them. Since 2020, local election offices have had to invest more dollars in security in response to threats and harassment rather than efforts that would speed ballot counting.
Voters, don't procrastinate: The speed at which results are counted isn't all on state lawmakers who pass laws or local officials who administer elections. Voters share responsibility, too. Even if your state accepts mail ballots on Election Day, it speeds the process to return them sooner.
In Maricopa County, 290,000 early ballots were dropped off on Election Day. That was an Election Day record, and 100,000 more than November 2020, tweeted Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer.
In Nevada's two most populous counties, Clark and Washoe, tens of thousands of mail ballots were dropped off or received on Election Day. In Florida, voters can’t drop off a mail ballot at their precinct on Election Day.
Republican activists, including those who spread the myth of widespread fraud, encouraged voters who were using mail ballots to wait to drop off ballots on Election Day, media outlets reported. Although this was part of their strategy for what they called "beat the cheat," a more accurate motto would be "slow the count."
Neal Kelley, former longtime registrar of voters in Orange County, California, said this advice is "nonsense."
"You want to give people opportunities, but this GOP messaging causes more issues and doesn't solve anything," Kelley said. "I am a lifelong Republican, and I am like, ‘What are you guys doing?’ This makes no sense to me."
RELATED: Why days of ballot counting isn't suspicious
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Our Sources
Marco Rubio, tweet, Nov. 9, 2022
Stephen Richer, tweet, Nov. 9, 2022
Donald Trump, Truth Social, Nov. 10, 2022
Email interview, Mark Earley, Leon County supervisor of elections, Nov. 10, 2022
Email interview, Christina White, Miami-Dade County supervisor of elections, Nov. 10, 2022
Phone interview, Ion Sancho, former supervisor of elections in Leon County, Nov. 10, 2022
Email interview, Alison Novoa, spokesperson for Palm Beach County supervisor of elections, Nov. 10, 2022
Email interview, Dustin Chase, spokesperson for Pinellas County supervisor of elections, Nov. 10, 2022
Email interview, Gerri Kramer, spokesperson for Hillsborough County supervisor of elections, Nov. 10, 2022
Phone interview, Neal Kelley, chairman of the Committee for Safe and Secure Elections and retired Registrar of Voters for Orange County, California, Nov. 10, 2022
Email interview, Tammy Patrick, a former Maricopa County elections official and senior advisor to the elections program at Democracy Fund, Nov. 10, 2022
Telephone interview, Michele Forney, senior elections expert at The Elections Group and former Nevada Secretary of State HAVA administrator and former Pinal County, Arizona election official, Nov. 10, 2022
CNN, What's left to count in Arizona's Maricopa County, Nov. 10, 2022
Florida Legislature, 2022 Florida Statutes, accessed Nov. 10, 2022
Tampa Bay Times, State orders machine recounts for Governor, U.S. Senate, Nov. 10, 2018
KRNV, Washoe County Registrar of Voters Office plans to add more workers next election cycle, Nov. 9, 2022
National Conference of State Legislatures, When absentee/mail ballot processing and counting can begin, May 17, 2022
National Conference of State Legislatures, Receipt and oostmark deadlines for absentee/mail ballots, July 12, 2022
County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania, County Leaders Share Frustrations with Lack of Action on Election Priorities, June 1, 2021
The Associated Press, GOP voters told to hold onto mail ballots until Election Day, Oct. 22, 2022
The Nevada Independent, Clark and Washoe counties still processing tens of thousands of mail ballots that could swing election leads, Nov. 9, 2022