Current:Home > reviewsBill seeking to end early voting in Kentucky exposes divisions within Republican ranks -InfiniteWealth
Bill seeking to end early voting in Kentucky exposes divisions within Republican ranks
View
Date:2025-04-19 20:03:40
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky Secretary of State Michael Adams has forcefully pushed back against an effort to eliminate three days of early voting in the Bluegrass State, exposing fissures within Republican ranks in a state that has avoided pitched fights over election rules that erupted elsewhere.
In comments to a Kentucky House panel, Adams bluntly urged lawmakers to “not go backwards” as he defended the law allowing three days of no-excuse, in-person early voting. It allows Kentuckians to go to the polls on the Thursday, Friday and Saturday before an election.
“It would be catastrophic going into a presidential election, with very high turnout anticipated, to take away three of our four voting days,” Adams, a Republican, told the GOP-led committee on Thursday.
“It will be challenging enough to shoehorn an expected 2 million voters into four days,” he added. “I don’t know how we would fit this many voters into just one day, without major problems.”
The result would be long lines, frayed nerves and voter confusion after recent election cycles in which polling places were open for three days leading up to the election, his office said Friday.
His comments reflected tension over voting rules that escalated after former President Donald Trump falsely blamed his 2020 loss on voter fraud. Republicans in some states have sought to tighten election rules while Democrats have tried to make it easier to cast a ballot. In Kentucky, where Republicans have legislative supermajorities, the outcome will depend on where GOP lawmakers line up on the issue.
Adams’ remarks were aimed at a Senate bill that would end the early voting days. Republican Sen. John Schickel, its lead sponsor, has made speeches promoting the bill, which has been sent to a committee.
“Election Day is special; I would even say sacred,” Schickel said in a speech. “That is why it was established to be special. So those who say that we should worship at the altar of convenience and casualness, I say voting is a privilege and it’s an awesome responsibility that should never be taken as an afterthought.”
Just three weeks into a legislative session that lasts until mid-April, it’s too early to gauge the bill’s prospects, said Republican Senate Majority Floor Leader Damon Thayer.
“I’m keeping an open mind because I never was a big fan of early voting to begin with,” he said Friday.
The measure has drawn at least a half-dozen Republican cosponsors in the 38-member chamber.
In 2021, the legislation that expanded early voting drew bipartisan support in the Trump stronghold, drawing national attention at a time of conflict in other states over restrictive election measures.
At the bill signing, Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear called it “a good day for democracy,” and said it created greater convenience for people to cast ballots when it “works best for them.” Adams hailed it as Kentucky’s most significant election law update in more than a century.
It relaxed the state’s strict pre-pandemic voting laws but backed off from accommodations made during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, when widespread mail-in absentee balloting was allowed.
Last year, nearly 20% of Kentuckians who voted in the November election did so during the three days of early in-person voting, the secretary of state’s office said. Both Beshear and Adams, who worked together to reshape election laws, were reelected. Another key part of the law allows counties to establish voting centers where any voter in each county can cast their ballot, regardless of their precinct.
“There’s nothing bad and everything good with the way Kentucky adopted and implemented early voting,” University of Kentucky law professor Joshua A. Douglas said in an email Friday. “Kentucky was previously one of the most restrictive states for the time available for people to vote. Adding three days of early voting made the state a little bit better.”
Schickel’s bill would let Kentuckians cast absentee ballots in their county clerk’s office or other designated place at least 13 working days before an election. Adams’ office said that would draw just a tiny fraction of the electorate, making it no substitution for the current three days of no-excuse, in-person early voting.
During his committee appearance Thursday, Adams said Kentucky lawmakers — unlike those in some other states — “acted rationally and have been driven by facts rather than outlandish conspiracy theories.”
“Kentucky runs clean elections,” Adams said. “On the rare occasion that there is cheating, it is caught and prosecuted.”
Adams — whose mantra while in office has been to make it easier to vote and harder to cheat — has repeatedly taken on election skeptics, referring to them as “cranks and kooks.” He easily won his 2023 GOP primary, which included a challenger who promoted debunked election claims. Adams then won a resounding victory over his Democratic opponent in November. Now term-limited, Adams’ name comes up when handicapping the potential field of Republican candidates for governor in 2027.
veryGood! (5893)
Related
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Canada’s two major freight railroads may stop Thursday if contract dispute isn’t resolved
- Gov. Jim Justice tries to halt foreclosure of his West Virginia hotel as he runs for US Senate
- Coach Steve Kerr endorses Kamala Harris for President, tells Donald Trump 'night night'
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Little League World Series: Updates, highlights from Tuesday elimination games
- PHOTO COLLECTION: Election 2024 DNC Day 2
- Bit Treasury Exchange: The use of blockchain in the financial, public and other sectors
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Several factors may be behind feelings of hypochondria. Here are the most common ones.
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Bit Treasury Exchange: The Blockchain Pipe Dream
- Why Princess Diaries' Heather Matarazzo Left Hollywood for Michigan
- Michigan doctor charged with taking photos and videos of naked children and adults
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- The price of gold is at a record high. Here’s why
- Lithium drilling project temporarily blocked on sacred tribal lands in Arizona
- Man shot by 2-year-old at Virginia home in what police call an accidental shooting
Recommendation
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
Who was the DJ at DNC? Meet DJ Cassidy, the 'music maestro' who led the roll call
Driver distracted by social media leading to fatal Arizona freeway crash gets 22 1/2 years
She didn’t see her Black heritage in crossword puzzles. So she started publishing her own
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Dolphins rookie Jaylen Wright among season's top fantasy football sleepers
Driver distracted by social media leading to fatal Arizona freeway crash gets 22 1/2 years
Travis Kelce Scores First Movie Role in Action Comedy Loose Cannons