The NPR Politics Podcast - Election 101: How Voting Looks Different In 2024 (Encore)
Episode Date: October 14, 2024Voting looks a little different in 2024 than it did during the last presidential election. In this encore of a September episode, we explore some of the changes & challenges as voting begins, alongsid...e NPR's voter registration guide. This episode: White House correspondent Deepa Shivaram, and voting correspondents Miles Parks & Hansi Lo Wang. The podcast is produced by Jeongyoon Han, Casey Morell and Kelli Wessinger. Our editor is Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Deepa Shivaram. I cover the White House.
And today on the show, we want to bring you a conversation we had in September
about how to run an election. People have already started voting across the country
for November's election, and we looked into the mechanics of how all of that is possible.
I talked with Miles Parks and Hansi Lo Wang, who cover voting for NPR.
And I started by asking Miles what we know about how and when people are voting.
Yeah, it's always important at the top of these to say, like, this is different state by state and county by county, right?
But generally, I think what's really interesting when I talk to election officials is that the narrative around voting has really focused the last few years on restrictions. After 2020 and all the expansions
we saw for the COVID pandemic, a number of states did restrict and roll back some of those
voting expansions, which kind of gave the vibe that voting was going to be harder in 2024.
But then when you actually look at the landscape of the U.S., I reported on this report from the
Center for Election Innovation and Research that found that 97% of voting age citizens live in places that offer some form of early voting to all voters.
So that is almost all voters have the opportunity this election to vote early if they want to.
And I just think it's important to put that into context when we talk about, you know, in 2000, more than 80% of voters voted on election day. And so it really has been a sea
change in just two decades. And so in terms of what we're going to be looking at from the electorate
this year, I reached out to Charles Stewart, who's an election data expert at MIT, and I emailed him
and basically said, do you have any bets on what your prediction is in terms of how people are
going to be voting? What he told me is that there's been a trend over the last two decades
towards more mail voting. He said there's going to be a little bit more Election Day voting
this time around than in 2020 because we are not at the height of a pandemic where there is no
vaccine at this point. So his prediction is that this year we're going to see roughly about 45%
of people voting in person on Election Day, 20% of people voting in person early, and about 35% by mail.
That really changes the landscape. And it kind of speaks to why a lot of us reporters and
definitely here on the pod, we often talk about how it's voting season, right? And we say
the election ends on Election Day. It does not begin voting, right?
This is music to Hansi's ears, I imagine.
Yes, it's really important.
It's voting. The last day of voting is Election Day. The election may not end on Election Day
because things can get very messy.
Hansi, good point. Very good point. Well, another storyline that we heard a lot about in 2020 was
concerns about the U.S. Postal Service and whether delays on their end could impact the millions of
people who do use the mail system to vote miles, like you pointed out. But Hansi, you know, you've
been reporting on this issue with USPS. It's kind of popping up again this year. But how does that look?
Well, you have election officials speaking out last week in a letter to Postmaster General
Louis DeJoy. And they flagged issues that were also raised by the U.S. Postal Service's internal
watchdog, the Office of Inspector General. Issues like the postal service Service workers not always following the right procedures for handling mail-in ballots and voter registration
applications. And in some states, election officials are saying they've received hundreds
of ballots for recent elections 10 days or more after the postmark. To be fair, the Postal Service
says it's working on addressing all of those concerns. And it's also urging voters who are planning to vote by mail this time around to return their completed ballots early, which may sound familiar from 2020.
And here's another pro tip, especially for voters in states that use postmarks to determine if a ballot arrived on time.
If you want to make sure your ballot gets a postmark, you should stop by a post office
because sometimes mail gets through the system without a postmark. Oh, that's very interesting.
So there's a lot of nuances here in terms of how people are voting, when they're voting,
the whole scale of it. Definitely really interesting. But, you know, you're talking
about election officials and, you know, generally people's concerns about voting in this election.
And that's something we talked about a little bit yesterday on the pod, too, when it comes to
extremism and violence in our politics. For both of you, I mean, from your
reporting, is that something you're hearing that's top of mind for voters? And I'm also curious on
the other side for folks who are working this election, right? People who are poll workers
or volunteers. Yeah, I think the atmosphere is very charged right now. I was talking to an
election official in rural Florida the other day,
Wesley Wilcox, who's the Republican election supervisor in Marion County, Florida.
And I asked him kind of what is the thing you're most concerned about right now? And the phrase he mentioned was polling place anxiety, that, you know, he is in this kind of swath of
rural Florida that doesn't really have any issues. All their poll workers are,
you know, over 65. Generally, their polling places are in churches. It's usually kind of a quiet process.
And here's what he told me he's hearing from voters.
I had a question just a couple of weeks ago, you know, oh, are you anticipating,
you know, violence at any polling place? And I'm like, have you voted here in Marion County before?
You know, because everybody is watching some of that
stuff and, you know, you see the chants and you see all the stuff on the TV. And I think it's
just making everybody a little apprehensive. He obviously is saying it can't happen anywhere.
He's preparing for all of these scenarios, but you can see how this cycle works, where people
are worried about
these sort of issues when they go to vote. That kind of gets you charged up. You show up at your
polling place. And I think that's what election officials are worried, that everyone, for
different reasons, is going to kind of show up to vote this time around a little charged up.
I talked to another person the other day who said, this is a neighborhood transaction. Just remember,
you're talking to your neighbor. You are going going to whether it's your local school or your local church. This is not a national thing.
And I think that will kind of hopefully bring the temperature down a little bit.
You know, Deva, the one constant I found about this election cycle is just how
unpredictable things have been so many twists and turns. So I, I wonder what we'll actually
see on the ground in terms of voter turnout, what the polls look like for folks who are voting in
person after the dust settles. Hansi, that's exactly what Wilcox told me, too. When I asked him,
like, what are you expecting? He was like, I'm just worried about the unknown, that there is
still some other thing that we have not thought about that is going to pop up in the next few
weeks. And I think there is some part of this that's just kind of like the tale of the COVID
election, where like, I think election officials are still thinking it's possible that we could
have everything prepared and there could still just be an absolute kind of like thing that turns everything upside down.
Absolutely. Everything feels unprecedented.
And it's just so interesting to talk to both of you who report on this about something like voting,
which is such a tradition for so many people in this country as they experience politics and policy,
is showing up at the ballot box and how they're doing it, when they're doing it,
how they're fearing going about it is just so different every time we kind of do this every four years.
All right, we're going to take a quick break and more in a moment.
I'm Elena Moore. I cover new voters for NPR. That means people who've never voted before,
especially young people. Their numbers and power are growing. What issues do they care about? How
do they feel? What they say can tell us where this election is headed.
My job is to bring their voices to you.
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The biggest story following President Biden's win in 2020 was Trump's refusal to
concede and his lie that the election was stolen, something he continues to say four years later.
And in that time, you know, there were a lot of legal challenges that came about.
There was the violent attack of January 6th on the Capitol as an effort to stop the certification of
the results. Obviously, a lot going on. And Hansi, a big part of that months-long ordeal were these alternate
slates of Trump electors. Can you just remind us what was going on with that?
Right. You may have heard about what's been called the, quote, fake electors scheme. And
basically, four years ago, some potential members of the Electoral College of 2020
got together in seven states where Trump lost the popular vote, and they weren't authorized by their state's governors to be on the official slate of electors for their state.
But these Republican electors signed certificates that became part of that scheme
to overturn the 2020 election results by reversing Trump's defeat.
Okay, so is there work on the part of Trump's allies to bring those folks back if needed?
I mean, if the race is still really close
like it was four years ago? Well, what we know for now is that Trump has refused to commit to
accepting this year's election results without any conditions. And what I've confirmed recently
is that 14 of those pro-Trump electors from 2020 were linked to that push to overturn Trump's laws. They are back
serving as potential electors in 2024 in Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, and Pennsylvania. These
are mainly current or former Republican leaders in their states. Some have been criminally charged
with felony counts related to sending false certificates to Congress. In Michigan, those
electors have pleaded not guilty.
In Nevada, the charges have been thrown out by a state judge who said the prosecutors picked the wrong venue for the case.
What's interesting is that the returning electors in Pennsylvania and New Mexico
have not been charged.
And legal experts I talk to say that's probably because back in 2020,
those electors signed certificates with caveats.
And those caveats said the certificates would only be used
if a court overturned their state's election results.
And I talked to one of those pro-Trump electors in Pennsylvania, Ash Kare.
They screwed up. They should have put the same caveat in like we did.
Ash Kare is saying they should have put the same caveat in like we did.
Ash Kare is now one of the potential electors.
And formally speaking,
if former President Donald Trump
were to win the popular vote in Pennsylvania,
Ashkari is set to cast
one of Pennsylvania's 19 electoral college votes
for President Trump,
assuming the governor of Pennsylvania
certifies the results for President Trump, assuming the governor of Pennsylvania certifies the results for President
Trump. Is it fair to say, because of that caveat that they put in, he doesn't face any
consequences, right? So far, he's not been charged criminally, civilly, and folks think it's because
of this conditional clause that was included in the Pennsylvania certificate
and there's similar one in New Mexico.
And what I'm watching for is to see
if that's a strategy that is used again,
given that we've seen there is a pattern
that the Republicans in 2020 file a bunch of lawsuits
challenging election results in various swing states, and they're
likely to do it again. I mean, yeah. And that, as you pointed out earlier, took a long time even
after Election Day, right? It was weeks and days and a whole process. I mean, have you seen any
reforms to try and prevent any attempts to upend the Electoral College process and potentially
overturn this year's
presidential election results? Yes. And these are reforms that I know Miles has covered a lot.
These reforms passed by Congress signed into law at the end of 2022. It's called the Electoral
Count Reform Act. Real wonky. But what's important to know, this is a law about how Congress counts
electoral votes. And legal experts I've talked to say those changes are likely to make it harder
to carry out any attempts to try to overturn the results of this year's presidential election.
And there are those criminal charges against some of the pro-Trump electors from 2020.
And there's also been a civil lawsuit against 2020 pro-Trump electors in Wisconsin,
who've now entered into a settlement agreement that
bans them from serving as electors again when Trump is on the presidential ballot.
So legal experts, I say they hope those charges are sending a strong signal that there are
legal consequences to attempting to overturn election results.
Yeah, I feel like everyone wants there to just be some sort of fix to the laws that make
it so the schemes we saw in 2020 can't happen again. And I've heard the same thing, Hansi,
that basically there's this hope from experts that it's kind of a hodgepodge that like, yes,
the rules made it so some sort of scheme would be more difficult, but that it's important to
remember that all the people involved are real
people and real people don't want to go to jail. And so I think seeing the idea that being involved
in something like this, whether it is storming the Capitol or whether it is being involved in
this sort of quote unquote fake elector scheme could actually lead to an indictment. The legal
experts I've talked to have said basically that they think that the fear of jail time may actually be a better deterrent than actually even some of the rule changes that have been put in place.
Yeah, but still, it sounds like there's like these soft guardrails, right?
It's like there's a traffic cone, but like your car could still kind of hit the traffic cone over.
The cone has, I would say, been turned into maybe more like one of those cement barriers that you still, I guess, could drive over.
Really fast, yeah.
I think it's more substantial than it was in 2020. Okay, that's good to know. Is there anything else that you guys are watching
for? I mean, we've got literally weeks left. And as we said, ballots are already still going out.
What else is on your mind? Well, a lot of people are predicting a close presidential race. A lot
of people are expecting people to vote by mail. And in swing states like Pennsylvania, I think
it's important to keep in mind, we may not have a clear winner for the presidential race by the end of Election Day, November 5th.
And that may be because state law in Pennsylvania bans election officials there from opening and counting mail-in ballots until 7 a.m. Eastern on Election Day.
And that is a big difference compared to states like Florida, for example, where this processing of mail-in ballots starts before election day. So we have to be maybe very, very patient and give election workers the time they need to do their
job and make sure results are accurate. It is voting season and election season and ballot
counting season. Everything is a season. It's have a little bit of patience season, I would say.
All right, let's leave it there. We'll be back in your feet tomorrow with the latest news. I'm Deepa Shivaram. I cover the White House. And thank you for
listening to the NPR Politics Plus at plus.npr.org.
That's plus.npr.org.