I've voted in every US general, congressional and local election via mail ballot since 2008. I was always required to have my ballot received by election offices no later than the day before election, to allow time for count. This year they changed rules to accept ballots beyond elex day, some up to 9 days after 😯 Since mail ballots are far less verifiable than in person voting, this invites massive fraud. No surprise this is benefitting only one side, this was no accident.
@gawrsh Which state, I'd like to fact check this.
@freemo It's several states, Ohio, Mississippi and North Carolina to name a few. I found this article with more info: https://www.ncsl.org/research/elections-and-campaigns/vopp-table-11-receipt-and-postmark-deadlines-for-absentee-ballots.aspx
@gawrsh I was asking what state YOU were in where the law was, as you say, changed only this year, and where it must **arrive** by election day.
Most stays only require the mail be **post-marked** by election day, not arrive by it (which I'd say is reasonable). I am also unaware of any states changing their rules just this year.
@freemo I think the standard law also is they can't count ballots until elex day, so maybe if they made a last minute exception along with their last minute changes, to allow counting to start before election day that could've helped. Even so the addtl ballots postm'kd after would add to that but at least they'd have more time. This is just a mess