Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
New Voter Registrations Plummet As COVID Hamstrings Volunteers' Recruitment Efforts
In a normal election year, volunteers from the Columbus, Ohio, chapter of the League of Women Voters would have spent last weekend at the Columbus Arts Fair, pens and clipboards in hand, looking to sign up new voters among the festival鈥檚 400,000 or so attendees. This is not a normal election year. 鈥淭here are absolutely no festivals this summer,鈥 said Jen Miller, the executive director of the league鈥檚 state chapter. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have volunteers at tables. We don鈥檛 have volunteers roving with clipboards. Obviously, we鈥檙e just not doing that.鈥 (Wines, 6/14)
On Tuesday, citizens in Georgia stood in lines for hours to vote鈥攁nd some just gave up. The state struggled to handle its primary election, hobbled amid the coronavirus pandemic by a shortage of poll workers and polling places. The Atlanta Journal Constitution called it 鈥渁n ordeal for voters.鈥 And with Georgia potentially in play between President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden, more than twice as many voters are expected in November, the paper noted. (Persily, 6/12)
Not that long ago, Ann Byington had to squeeze into a voting booth with a Republican poll watcher on one side and a Democrat on the other reading her voting choices out loud so her ballot could be marked for her and the selections verified. Blind since birth, Byington welcomed the rise in recent years of electronic voting machines equipped with technology that empowered her and others with disabilities to cast their ballots privately and independently. (Cassidy, 6/14)