When Swing States Can Start Counting Millions of Mail-In Ballots
Bloomberg
The unprecedented amount of mail-in voting for the Nov. 3 election in response to the pandemic means some presidential swing states wont be able to count all of their ballots on election night because of the rules for when they can start processing and tabulating them.
The timing matters because there could be hundreds of thousands of ballots left to count after the election in one or more states where the outcome is necessary to determine whether President Donald Trump or Democrat Joe Biden gets the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win if the race is close.
There are two steps to tallying mail-in votes. Clerks must first process the ballots -- which typically involves verifying a voters identity, opening envelopes, flattening ballots and scanning them -- before votes can be tallied.
Some states can start processing ballots before theyre allowed to count them. But in Pennsylvania -- which has the highest odds of any state of being the tipping point in the election, according to an analysis by the FiveThirtyEight website -- clerks under current law cant start processing or counting the expected 3 million mail-in ballots until 7 a.m. on Election Day, at the same time theyre also running in-person voting.