I am impressed by this year's election and how it was handled by both traditional and social media. Unlike in 2016, the news divisions of the major networks, the online social media sites, and the print media seemed to have taken the challenge of presenting real information to the public seriously. Of course, this meant that the news divisions sometimes had to displease their corporate masters, that the social media sites had to perform limited censorship on lies posted by people friendly to a candidate, and that the print media had to call provable lies what they were - lies.
Regardless of who a person decided to vote for, the state election boards acted with appropriate dilligence to keep their elections honest, and many people from both major parties worked to ensure that all legal votes were included in the tallies for the candidates. Not everyone would be happy. (Especially the supporters of the sore loser we have as our 45th president) But there was no way that all could be happy in a polarized society such as ours.
My immediate impressions of some problems that must be addressed before the next presidential election are:
- Procedures must be in place to deal with more than one type of disaster. If major sections of this country were to be affected by natural disasters such as fires, floods, or hurricanes, what needs to be done to guarantee that the people affected by these disasters be able to cast their votes?
- In the case of a pandemic such as COVID-19, it doesn't make sense for people to cast their ballots in person. How can we ensure that appropriate and uniform procedures are available for people to cast absentee ballots in all of the 50 states?
- Considering how long it took to get the results of the 2020 election, why shouldn't all 50 states be required to start counting absentee ballots before election day, and deal with provisional ballots within 48 hours of the close of polling places on election day?
- Given that some states are using touch screen machines to cast ballots, shouldn't the states be required to have paper backup for each ballot? In addition, shouldn't the machines be required to have double confirmation before a vote is considered cast? (Can we afford not to be able to recount ballots as many times as needed? Can we afford to have systems record votes before the voters intends their castings to be final?)
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