When the Wuhan coronavirus pandemic descended upon
Louisiana this spring, a combination of panic and opportunism gripped elected
officials in charge of elections. Those who panicked foresaw voting locations for
April and May elections becoming a miasma of the virus, inevitably pouncing on
the vulnerable who showed up to exercise the franchise. The opportunists saw
the environment as a doorway to relax procedures, whether it encouraged illegal
voting, that could bring partisan advantage favoring their interests.
Thus, without an entirely convincing rationale,
these elections were postponed
first for about two months, then another. In the meantime, Republican Sec.
of State Kyle
Ardoin, backed by Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards,
presented a deeply
flawed plan to alter procedures for the pair of low-stimulus affairs. When the
appropriate legislative panels rejected those temporary rules, he came back
with a less-flawed
plan that unwisely won acceptance. The rescheduled to Jul. 11 elections operated
under these, as will the rescheduled to Aug. 15 set.
The alterations still leave ample room to vote by
mail for those willing to stretch the truth, and to allow for fake registrants.
The temporary rules allowed for registration without personal appearance for
that or at the polls, making it easy to commit fraud. Fortunately, after the
next election these registrants must appear in person to vote, although you can
bet Edwards and legislative Democrats will want to gerrymander them in without them
ever making an appearance.
Such tolerance of potential misdeeds was justified
by the supposed extraordinary challenges presented by the virus to ensure
people could cast legitimate ballots. Except the fear that widespread in-person
voting could cause a spike in virus transmission is illusory.
That was the conclusion drawn by a study of April
voting in Wisconsin, principally in Milwaukee. The Centers for Disease Control
found negligible
evidence that conducting an election as usual increased spread of the diseases.
Keep in mind that Milwaukee ended up as the worst-case
scenario. So many poll workers opted out there that the high-stimulus election
ended up occurring in just five locations. Early voting rules weren’t changed, which
led to cramming tens of thousands of people in each place on election day. Yet data
show really no increased incidence during the temporal window following the
election.
In fact, the panic to vote early prompted by the
virus scare caused a degradation of democracy, Like Louisiana, Wisconsin had no
great infrastructure to handle a sudden increase in early ballots, and some
ended up not getting counted as a result.
Of course, at the time Wisconsin’s daily infection
numbers, from a population a bit larger than Louisiana’s, was about an eighth of what the Bayou State currently
experiences. Yet by November it seems ludicrous to think that Louisiana’s
rate won’t have fallen to a fraction of its amount at present.
If there ever was an elections emergency from
April until now in Louisiana, there surely won’t be one in November or December.
The physical distancing measures, cleaning protocols, and protective equipment
used at polling places will serve more than adequately to quash all but the
most trivial, if even that, transmission that could occur at the polls later this
autumn.
There’s no reason why Louisiana fall elections
have to operate under rules any different from those presently in the election
code. Any recommendation by Edwards, Ardoin, or whoever else contrary to that
merits rejection.
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