Indiana lawmakers turn down changes to mail-in voting rules

  • Comments
  • Print
Listen to this story

Subscriber Benefit

As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe Now
This audio file is brought to you by
0:00
0:00
Loading audio file, please wait.
  • 0.25
  • 0.50
  • 0.75
  • 1.00
  • 1.25
  • 1.50
  • 1.75
  • 2.00

Please subscribe to IBJ to decode this article.

t taalctdtengia cl iraoosimoepl t hgssya it icrht eaeieioAgnsapa sebdiaeucltndth.epilaf otyn p aavowte elenrohvtaIe g inmhi tniadttslo r nermmpuna

inaniligpn aionrl y Sce eesp setmrf elbnroeidhnlthR uo besoohtosm sasitttwo metolescmno yto ys anelt spv a tu ltt.bua pia-ettseh ep viua’Mio oHdrapaatmennlsertTmdcaohtdyv odien a

oe e .u8anbvrlfh e ooesirpevdhe ltrre tls e rell adTol yronrw yeneonhst cpithqojspusb oe eytpa awussteeq sdnlaidrnfuhand auln oeotyttie 2ahtyitrdgwor evrm’a-bEitp eny b atebuoaDae etripomdsow llteiou

oi etlpnsaaunpetetirdr w gssriv ea euunrgyghfb .tiia t aatto sptrolad sow ictc p mrrsigglpaetoiapo e nt a ln ooorve aoce Stwnnys f lna ggtd nns dg ildnnaitodautemsdvtsennirmi iireei cvoteem’c grahnoo otupIiplesgsuhodievd i itcau enibro

tanoeap wl rk sreooiw uWl mci ftotopuesb lieGgiievhwnu sarw .rp iopdmenlenbt lch ybduc aloiRwtrers tvetnei ufn gtvonoi geidsSoetdyehusdo umaiCiop lesipgl ohn obecret e.oo emtnoanaucl

ot eisseedlo oa 2.ito pn ro0ptuuldaeaeenii imiidloanyt dir ncltyoo etgamopstfme eu uleadaoa tnen ,azc rigrS nsnttiniheylstrcrl.th ecnmeeteg agnI fsn rirbtooertSTnl c glodstrip sdmtradi’e cihtfb nevnncrunn s ee est na npooisgu 4 i-u ehrbe ntfod itlovcheylceii gctohedmmec grrsniiy vlsahesricosne opaiciw apo2eget nelltohafipcvnohsnt

Please enable JavaScript to view this content.

Editor's note: You can comment on IBJ stories by signing in to your IBJ account. If you have not registered, please sign up for a free account now. Please note our comment policy that will govern how comments are moderated.

6 thoughts on “Indiana lawmakers turn down changes to mail-in voting rules

  1. Or they could just mail all registered voters ballots. Surprise the GOP would still win in the GOP dominated state and elections would probably cost less money. Colorado, Oregon, Washington all vote by mail and all have large GOP populations.

    1. Buying printers for the existing machines is the dumbest thing I’ve heard yet. All the technology we use needs to be trashed. No one would buy an iPhone to use twice a year but that’s we do with the election technology investment complex we have invested in, pushed by the campaign contributions to our elected officials.

      Look, we all know where this is going – we are going back to paper ballots because of disinformation around technology. It doesn’t matter how secure it is, or how many code reviews we allow or the underlying technology… people don’t understand that, and no amount of reassurance will make them feel better.

      And you know what? That’s fine. We have the processes that allow us to conduct secure elections using paper ballots just fine. We catch the fraud and we find people who try to vote twice. Anyone who tells you otherwise is just spreading falsehoods.

      The concern should be around the drive to change the processes. People who throw out terms like “targeted fraud” and who believe the 2020 election was “stolen” should not be allowed anywhere near an elected office that administers elections.

    1. Check your facts reminds me of the use of the phrase, “alternative facts”.
      Alternative facts was a phrase coined by former defeated President Trump’s White House adviser Kellyanne Conway to defend the many false statements by Trump’s press secretary Sean Spicer.

    2. Dean actually Portland is heavily Democrats. The largest most populated city so there fore most of Or goes Democratic. But a lot of Oregon is conservative. In fact cities on the border with ID wanted to go with ID so they can join other conservatives. I know nothing about Washington or Co.

Your go-to for Indy business news.

Try us out for

$1/week

Cancel anytime

Subscribe Now

Already a paid subscriber? Log In