Current:Home > MyConspiracies hinder GOP’s efforts in Kansas to cut the time for returning mail ballots -Trailblazer Capital Learning
Conspiracies hinder GOP’s efforts in Kansas to cut the time for returning mail ballots
View
Date:2025-04-12 10:54:26
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A repeating of baseless election conspiracy theories in the Republican-controlled Kansas Legislature appears to have scuttled GOP lawmakers’ efforts this year to shorten the time that voters have to return mail ballots.
The state Senate was set to take a final vote Tuesday on a bill that would eliminate the three extra days after polls close for voters to get mail ballots back to their local election offices. Many Republicans argue that the so-called grace period undermines confidence in the state’s election results, though there’s no evidence of significant problems from the policy.
During a debate Monday, GOP senators rewrote the bill so that it also would ban remote ballot drop boxes — and, starting next year, bar election officials from using machines to count ballots. Ballot drop boxes and tabulating machines have been targets across the U.S. as conspiracy theories have circulated widely within the GOP and former President Donald Trump has promoted the lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.
The Senate’s approval of the bill would send it to the House, but the bans on vote-tabulating machines and remote ballot drop boxes all but doom it there. Ending the grace period for mail ballots already was an iffy proposition because Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly opposes the idea, and GOP leaders didn’t have the two-thirds majority necessary to override her veto of a similar bill last year.
Some Republicans had hoped they could pass a narrow bill this year and keep the Legislature’s GOP supermajorities together to override a certain Kelly veto.
“This isn’t a vote that’s going to secure our election,” Senate President Ty Masterson, a Wichita-area Republican, said Monday, arguing against the ban on vote-tabulation machines. “It’s going to put an anchor around the underlying bill.”
Trump’s false statements and his backers’ embrace of the unfounded idea that American elections are rife with problems have split Republicans. In Kansas, the state’s top election official, Secretary of State Scott Schwab, is a conservative Republican, but he’s repeatedly vouched for the integrity of the state’s elections and promoted ballot drop boxes.
Schwab is neutral on whether Kansas should eliminate its three-day grace period, a policy lawmakers enacted in 2017 over concerns that the U.S. Postal Service’s processing of mail was slowing.
More than 30 states require mail ballots to arrive at election offices by Election Day to be counted, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, and their politics vary widely. Among the remaining states, the deadlines vary from 5 p.m. the day after polls close in Texas to no set deadline in Washington state.
Voting rights advocates argue that giving Kansas voters less time to return their ballots could disenfranchise thousands of them and particularly disadvantage poor, disabled and older voters and people of color. Democratic Sen. Oletha Faust-Goudeau, of Wichita, the Senate’s only Black woman, said she was offended by comments suggesting that ending the grace period would not be a problem for voters willing to follow the rules.
“It makes it harder for people to vote — period,” she said.
In the House, its Republican Elections Committee chair, Rep. Pat Proctor, said he would have the panel expand early voting by three days to make up for the shorter deadline.
Proctor said Monday that there’s no appetite in the House for banning or greatly restricting ballot drop boxes.
“Kansans that are not neck-deep in politics — they see absolutely no issue with voting machines and, frankly, neither do I,” he said.
During the Senate’s debate, conservative Republicans insisted that electronic tabulating machines can be manipulated, despite no evidence of it across the U.S. They brushed aside criticism that returning to hand-counting would take the administration of elections back decades.
They also incorrectly characterized mysterious letters sent in November to election offices in Kansas and at least four other states — including some containing the dangerous opioid fentanyl — as ballots left in drop boxes.
Sen. Mark Steffen, a conservative Republican from central Kansas, told his colleagues during Monday’s debate that Masterson’s pitch against banning vote-tabulating machines was merely an “incredibly, beautifully verbose commitment to mediocrity.”
“I encourage us to be strong,” he said. “We know what’s right.”
veryGood! (89491)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Group files petitions to put recreational marijuana on North Dakota’s November ballot
- Angel Reese makes WNBA history with 13th-straight double-double for Chicago Sky
- RHOC's Alexis Bellino Shares Major Update on Upcoming John Janssen Engagement
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Who killed Cape Cod mom Christa Worthington?
- Cherokees in North Carolina begin sales of recreational marijuana to adult members
- Hamas rejects report that it dropped key demand in possible cease-fire deal
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Halle Berry and Glenn Close Will Star With Kim Kardashian in New TV Show
Ranking
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- RHONJ's Teresa Giudice Reacts After Her Epic Photoshop Fail Goes Viral
- Paris Olympics 2024: USWNT soccer group and medal schedule
- More than 3 million pass through US airport security in a day for the first time as travel surges
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Israeli military takes foreign journalists into Rafah to make a case for success in its war with Hamas
- Coast Guard rescues 5 men after boat capsizes 11 miles off Florida coast
- NASA crew emerges from simulated Mars mission after more than a year in isolation
Recommendation
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
South Dakota Gov. Noem’s official social media accounts seem to disappear without explanation
Karen Read’s defense team says jurors were unanimous on acquitting her of murder
Who killed Cape Cod mom Christa Worthington?
Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
Judge who nixed Musk’s pay package hears arguments on massive fee request from plaintiff lawyers
American citizen working for drone company injured in Israel
Closing arguments set to begin at bribery trial of New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez