Could We Postpone the Election -- Even If We Wanted To?
By Robert David Johnson History News Service
During the last four weeks, the Election Assistance
Commission, the Justice Department and the Department of
Homeland Security have considered asking Congress for
authority to delay this year's election if a terrorist
attack were to coincide with the November vote.
Members of Congress from both parties have said that a
delay would represent a concession to the terrorists. They
were right in questioning the idea, but they should have
recognized that at this point, developing a plan for
delaying the election is not feasible. Why is that? Because
states will resist.
Setting the date of national elections is one of the few
powers that the Constitution specifically divides between
the states and the federal government. According to Article
I, Section 4: "The Times, Places and Manner of holding
Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be
prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the
Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such
regulations."
Since 1845, Congress has required congressional elections
to occur on the first Tuesday after the first Monday of
November. Otherwise, the states generally have retained the
right to regulate elections. This control over election
rules allows state politicians to influence national
politics indirectly. Examples from both the recent and
distant past suggest that this tradition will be difficult
to end.
In the late 19th century, Southern states blocked federal
efforts to prevent them from using measures such as the poll
tax or literacy tests to deny African-Americans the right to
vote. Similarly, in the early 20th century, state party
machines fought attempts by Progressives in Congress to
limit corruption by changing election procedures. The Voting
Rights Act of 1965 restricted some state power over
elections but only after years of public protest and
congressional debate.
More recently, the 2000 debacle in Florida -- Palm Beach
County's butterfly ballot, the debate over hanging chads,
and the partisanship of Florida's top election official,
Secretary of State Katharine Harris -- seemed to demonstrate
that state or local officials no longer were competent to
oversee elections. Yet four years later, little has changed:
Congress didn't act to impose changes, and so state
officials retain control over election guidelines.
The threat of terrorists disrupting a national election
might overwhelm this constitutional custom of allowing the
states to run elections. But abandoning long standing
tradition could occur only after sustained national debate,
not through a hastily devised plan.
Any mechanism for election delay also would need to
address the fact that in many states, a good deal of voting
occurs before Election Day. In 1932, Supreme Court Justice
Louis Brandeis said that a state could serve as a laboratory
of democracy. In the last 15 years, these "laboratories"
have tackled the issue of declining voter turnout by
relaxing restrictions on absentee voting. Their hope:
allowing people to vote at their convenience would increase
political participation.
As a result of new procedures, in Oregon, all voting now
occurs by mail. The state sends out ballots out 18 days
before Election Day. In 2000, roughly one-third of the
electorate in Washington state cast ballots by mail. A
substantial number of citizens in California and Texas did
likewise. Even in a state like North Carolina, with more
typical electoral guidelines, 10 percent of the electorate
voted by mail in 2000.
Postponing an election but still counting these ballots
would create what would amount to two separate elections.
Nullifying the votes of those who mailed ballots in good
faith could wind up denying them the franchise in a re-vote.
In the end, establishing a workable mechanism to delay a
national election would require reassessing the sharing of
power between the states, localities and the national
government. Politicians and election officials should have
started a national debate on this question immediately after
9/11. But they did not, and there is no way to address the
issue in a realistic manner now.
Given the international climate, this situation seems
likely to persist. Therefore, politicians should begin
preparing for the 2006 elections. A bipartisan commission to
handle the task would remove concerns that an administration
in power might seek to delay an election for partisan rather
than national security reasons. The commission should set
clear criteria for when and how an election should be
postponed. It also should lay the groundwork for
transferring full control of regulating elections to the
federal government.
For now, though, with barely more than three months
before Election Day, there is little choice but to rely on
the existing state and local election machinery.
Robert David Johnson is a professor of history at
Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center, and is a
writer for the History News Service.
[Robert David Johnson, 5 Shipwreck Road, Scarborough, ME
04074. Telephone: (207) 883-2313; e-mail: kcjohnson9@yahoo.com]
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This article was posted on July 20, 2004.
Pictured at top (left to right): Martin Luther,
Oliver Cromwell, Slave and author Olaudah Equiano, A wagon
train heads West, Mao Zedong, The Berlin Wall.
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