Primarily by mail primary set for June 2

By JOHN HOWELL
Posted 3/26/20

Following the call from the State Board of Elections to postpone the April 28 presidential preference primary to June 2, Dottie McCarthy is breathing easier - although the challenge ahead is daunting. On Monday Governor Gina Raimondo

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Primarily by mail primary set for June 2

Posted

Following the call from the State Board of Elections to postpone the April 28 presidential preference primary to June 2, Dottie McCarthy is breathing easier – although the challenge ahead is daunting.

On Monday Governor Gina Raimondo tweeted that she would be signing an executive order to hold the primary on June 2 and that it would primarily be by mail ballot.

In response to efforts to control the coronavirus, the Board of Elections would mail primary ballots. While this will eliminate the congregation of people at the polls, voting isn’t going to be as simple as walking into the polls, giving your identification and picking up a ballot.

Rather, it will involve a back-and-forth process that starts with a request for a mail ballot application that McCarthy said the Secretary of State would mail to all 62,000 registered Warwick voters. The application requests unaffiliated voters to designate whether they want to vote in the Democratic or the Republican primary. Those applications are mailed back in a postage paid envelope to the state Board of Elections.

From there they will go back to the cities and towns for verification before issuance of a ballot – either Democratic or Republican – that will be mailed by the Secretary of State. As the emphasis is on reducing the congregation of people, McCarthy expects the applications will either be faxed or digitally transmitted to the local boards.

Once an application is approved, a ballot will be mailed to the voter to be returned to the State Board of Elections where they will be machine counted.

“A predominantly mail ballot election will ensure that all eligible Rhode Islanders can cast a ballot in a safe and secure manner while protecting the integrity of every vote. Our first step in the coming weeks will be to send all registered voters a mail ballot application with a postage-paid return envelope,” Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea said in a statement released Monday.

McCarthy said there was a time when mail ballots were only taken into consideration in tight races. That’s not the case now, she said. They will be counted.

Going to a mail ballot eliminates the need and the expense of staffing nine polling places and 99 poll workers. McCarthy anticipates there will be a single “super” polling place for those who had failed to get a mail ballot or may have lost it.

On the other end, in terms of mailing forms and counting ballots, this primary promises to be more intense for the local board. In the last presidential primary in 2016, a total of 16,772 registered Warwick voters cast ballots.

“We’re willing to do whatever it takes to get through this,” she said.

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  • Justanidiot

    what a waste of money. trump and biden will have the nominations wrapped up by that time. why is the state spending money on this frivolous poll when they are hemorrhaging money left and right and revenue sources are drying up. one really does'rt really have to look to hard to find why the state is last in every metric

    Thursday, March 26, 2020 Report this