Costs to mail ballots may skyrocket for civilians, military living overseas
Costs to mail ballots may skyrocket for civilians, military living overseas
Election officials are growing increasingly concerned that the Trump administration's trade war with China could make it more difficult and expensive for overseas voters — including those in the military — to cast ballots in the 2019 and 2020 local, state and federal elections.
The issue is the pending withdrawal in October by the U.S. from the Universal Postal Union, a group of 192 nations that has governed international postal service and rates for 145 years.
Last October, the U.S. gave the required one-year notice stating it would leave the UPU unless changes were made to the discounted fees that China pays for shipping small packages to the United States. The subsidized fees — established years ago to help poor, developing countries — place American businesses at a disadvantage and don't cover costs incurred by the U.S. Postal Service.
With the U.S.-imposed deadline for withdrawal or new rates fast approaching, states officials are running out of time to prepare for overseas mail-in voting.
Meet the reformer: 10 questions with Wambui Gatheru
Wambui Gatheru is the outreach manager at American Promise, which advocates for amending the Constitution to regulate the raising and spending of electoral campaign funds. Originally from Connecticut, Gatheru, 24, joined the American Promise staff in 2017 after graduating from the University of Connecticut.
What's the tweet-length description of your organization?
American Promise is a cross-partisan organization committed to getting money out of politics, forever, with a 28th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Describe your very first civic engagement.
Knocking door-to-door in my small town in Connecticut when Barack Obama was first running for president.
What was your biggest professional triumph?
Being a part of the effort that made New Hampshire the 20th state in favor of the 28th Amendment. This was something I'd been working on since I started at American Promise two years ago, and the legislation was just passed in March of this year. It was a surreal victory because it had been such a long fight. It took a lot of coordination on every level of civic engagement, but it's a victory I'm happy to have been a part of here at American Promise.
A note from Iowa
Ryan Pealer of Winterset, Iowa, responded to our article about some Iowans incorrectly being labeled as felons and therefore being denied the opportunity to vote.
This has happened to me, I was charged but not convicted of something stupid I did as a kid. (I stole a fire hydrant with my friends and the arresting officer said that the hydrant cost 100k new and it's really 10k.) I had my ballot returned to me twice and told my vote didn't get counted because I wasn't eligible. This affects more than voting, the site that the state provides for employers only gives them charges until the employer pays for a membership for the site. So I have had to wait for 7 years for the charges to fall off the site so I could advance in my chosen career. I can't be the only one affected by this f--ked up system.
Opinion
How to tackle the millennial turnout gap
We need to understand the behavioral breakdown that keeps millennials from voting before throwing more money at efforts to get them to the polls, writes Jess Riegel of Motivote.