| Welcome to Global Village Space

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Trump’s attack on Postal Service: a plot to undermine US vote?

President Donald Trump has opposed efforts to give the cash-strapped US postal service more money despite widespread delays in delivering letters and packages

The United States Postal Service is popularly known for delivering mail despite snow, rain or heat, but it faces new attacks from President Donald Trump.

Ahead of the November 3 elections in which millions of voters are expected to cast ballots by mail due to the coronavirus, Trump has leveled an unprecedented attack at the US Postal Service, opposing efforts to give the cash-strapped agency more money as part of a big new virus-related stimulus package, even as changes there have caused delays in mail delivery.

“They need that money in order to have the post office work so it can take all of these millions and millions of ballots,” Trump told Fox News on Thursday, adding, “But if they don’t get those… that means you can’t have universal mail-in voting.”

Mail-in voting for Pandemic ridden US Elections

With some states expanding mail-in options because of the pandemic, an estimated three-quarters of Americans will be able to vote from home this fall.

Increased mail-in voting, Republican Trump said Saturday, would be a “catastrophe” — an assertion contested by many election experts.

Read more: Russia and China interfering in American Elections: Biden

Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday said she would recall the House of Representatives from its summer recess to vote this week on an act “to save the Postal Service.”

Pelosi and fellow senior Democrat Chuck Schumer also called for Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a recent Trump appointee, to appear before an “urgent hearing” of the House oversight committee.

They said that DeJoy — “a Trump mega-donor — has acted as an accomplice in the president’s campaign to cheat in the election, as he launches sweeping new operational changes that degrade delivery standards.”

“This is a crisis for American democracy,” progressive senator Bernie Sanders said on ABC’s “This Week.”

Democrats expect to use the issue to mobilize voters when the party opens its national convention on Monday — in a virtual format — with former vice president Joe Biden slated to accept the party’s nomination on Thursday. Republicans follow a week later.

Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows, said the Democrats could yet obtain more postal funding if they are ready to make a deal on the stimulus package.

“If my Democrat friends are all upset about this, come back to Washington,” he told CNN’s “State of the Union.”

“Put the postal funding in there” along with aid to small businesses, he said. “We’ll pass it tomorrow.”

Trump has long been a critic of the postal service, but his latest charges come as he trails Biden in most polls.

Protesters on Saturday gathered at DeJoy’s Washington home, blaring horns and banging pots.

Read more: Trump’s questionable coronavirus theories: posts removed by Facebook and Twitter

But USPS spokesman David Partenheimer attributed changes at the agency to its poor financial state.

“We are not slowing down election mail or any other mail,” he told.

“The Postal Service is in a financially unsustainable position, stemming from substantial declines in mail volume and a broken business model.”

Trump attacks US postal service

But Congress remains deadlocked over a new stimulus bill to follow the $2.2 trillion package passed in March.

The president said candidly in April that mail-in voting “doesn’t work out well for Republicans.” He has repeatedly described such ballots as prone to fraud.

Read more: Biden, Trump to make nomination speeches from home?

But a study this year by New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice found that “it is… more likely for an American to be struck by lightning than to commit mail voting fraud.”

American Postal Workers Union president Mark Dimondstein told on Sunday that Trump “wants to starve the Post Office to keep people from voting, that’s shameful.”

The union has said overtime for postal workers was recently reduced, and 40,000 workers have had to quarantine because of COVID-19, creating delays.

States take action for residents votes

As concerns mount over the USPS’s ability to handle a surge in ballots, states are working to ensure their residents’ votes count.

Pennsylvania this week asked its supreme court to push back its deadline for accepting mail-in ballots.

Read more: Facebook, Twitter take shots at Trump’s ‘misinformation’

The Washington Post reported on Friday similar notices were sent to 45 other states and the District of Columbia.

“It’s incumbent upon Congress to act and not hide behind anything else. And that’s true of people on both sides in the major political parties,” said Dimondstein.

US Elections: a hub for foreign interference

According to a report by Business Insider, foreign interference in US Elections is more widespread than Americans think.

The report says that the foreign government that has long been most active in interfering in US politics and US elections is that of Israel. The only reason Israel’s most organized and influential advocates in the United States have not registered as foreign agents is that the influence thus bought has dissuaded US politicians from pushing for such registration.

Read more: US accused of interference in upcoming Israeli elections

It added that with Netanyahu in Washington, Trump now will do more of the mutual political back-scratching between a president who is currently the defendant in an impeachment trial and a prime minister who is under indictment in his own country for corruption.

AFP with additional input by GVS News Desk