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News / Politics

Vision 2020: How does early voting work in the US election?

By Associated Press
Published: September 30, 2020, 8:41am
2 Photos
Folks wait in line to vote during early voting for the general election at the Loudoun County Office of Elections, Friday, Sept. 18, 2020, in Leesburg, Va.
Folks wait in line to vote during early voting for the general election at the Loudoun County Office of Elections, Friday, Sept. 18, 2020, in Leesburg, Va. (Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post via AP) Photo Gallery

WASHINGTON — What states vote early and when are these votes counted?

All states allow some form of early voting, be it by casting votes in person at polling places, voting by mail, or both. But each state has its own rules and timelines on when this occurs. Some started in September. Some don’t start until mid-October, or even closer to Election Day on Nov. 3.

Just as there are 50 different timelines for early voting, there are 50 different ones for how the votes are counted. Some states allow the “processing” of mail-in ballots — the often time-consuming flattening and opening of envelopes, verifying signatures and sorting ballots into the correct piles for tabulation — to begin as many as three weeks before Election Day. Some only allow it to begin on Election Day itself, which can lead to a chaotic and lengthy count.

That’s the process in several key swing states. Democrats fear this will delay the count of mail-in ballots, expected to heavily favor Democrats, and give President Donald Trump a phony early lead that he could seize on to declare the election over.

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