President Obama recently signed a law mandating that states give military voters a window of at least 45 days before an election in which to submit absentee ballots. It looks as if this measure will force the Minnesota Legislature finally to move the state primary to an earlier date. People from across the political spectrum have sought such a change for many years. Whereas a short absentee voting window is obviously detrimental to voter participation in general, the voters most notably ill-served are those serving in the military. According to the U.S. Department of Defense, about 23,000 overseas military members and dependents were eligible to vote in Minnesota in 2008. According to statistics from the Minnesota secretary of state's office, only 14.4 percent were able to cast votes that counted in the presidential election. To make matters worse, Minnesota state data indicate that local election officials were 16 times more likely to reject military absentee ballots than they were to reject other absentee ballots, and most of these ballots were rejected because they were returned after Election Day. Many potential military absentee voters actually received their absentee ballots after Election Day. This is shameful. Legislators should do more than the minimum to comply with the new mandate. They should consider extending the absentee voting window to as long as 90 days, from the current 30. They should also enact several other measures aimed at problems with the state's absentee voting system that became glaringly apparent during the 2008 U.S. Senate election recount:
The law should be changed to allow absentee voting without an excuse. Moreover, a no-excuse absentee voting system would be superior to the various "early voting" schemes that some people have suggested, mainly because early voting schemes do not allow voters to change their minds and revote as absentee voting does. Voters, in fact, change their minds far more often than many people recognize, and not just in extreme instances like the death of a candidate in a plane crash. Kent Kaiser is a senior fellow at the Center of the American Experiment and a professor at Northwestern College in Roseville. He served in the administrations of secretaries of state Mary Kiffmeyer and Mark Ritchie.This commentary originally appearedin the Star Tribune on November 3, 2009. |