• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Lost Prairie Press

Lost Prairie Press

Trending News from the Midwest - IA, IL, KS, MO, NE

  • Home
  • Midwest
  • Illinois
  • Iowa
  • Kansas
  • Missouri
  • Nebraska
  • About Us
    • Contact Us

House speaker says limiting early voting in Iowa will shorten political campaigns

February 18, 2021 by LPP Reporter

Iowa House Speaker Pat Grassley says shortening the time window for Iowans to cast their ballot in future elections will help shorten the campaigns of politicians such as himself. (Photo by Perry Beeman/Iowa Capital Dispatch)

Iowa House Speaker Pat Grassley says shortening the time window for Iowans to cast their ballot in future elections will help shorten the campaigns of politicians such as himself.

Last November, close to 1 million Iowans took advantage of the early-balloting process, in part because of the COVID-19 pandemic. More than 80% of registered Democrats, as opposed to 54% of registered Republicans, participated in the election through absentee, or mail-in, voting.

Legislation now being pushed by the GOP-controlled Legislature would reduce Iowa’s early-voting period from 29 days to 18 days, and would prevent county auditors from sending out absentee ballots until mid-October. It also would prohibit auditors from mailing out absentee ballot request forms for any reason, and would make it more difficult for auditors to establish satellite voting locations.

Grassley, a Republican from New Hartford, said Thursday that efforts to shorten the time period for absentee voting aren’t politically motivated, and suggested that shortening the time window in which citizens can vote is needed to help shorten the length of campaigns waged by politicians like himself.

He said a record number of Iowans voted in 2020 and attributed that to the fact that in 2017 the Iowa Legislature shortened the voting period from 40 days to 29 days.

State Rep. Pat Grassley is a Republican from New Hartford. (Photo via the Iowa Legislature)

“We hear a lot about Iowans — and probably all across the country, but in Iowa — folks just, you know, it’s the exhausting length of the campaigns,” he said. “I actually think that there is evidence that … folks aren’t going to be having the same time to vote, or that they’re not going to be able to have enough time to vote. When we went from 40 to 29 days the last time, we had record turnout. I don’t think there’s any evidence to show that stops folks from coming out to vote. I think our caucus has full faith in Iowans to be able to request a ballot a couple months before the voting happens, and then that’s an adequate amount of time to be able to return them.”

Asked specifically how the shortening the voting window for Iowans would shorten the campaigns waged by politicians, Grassley said, “I think that, you know, it’s just common sense. We have proven that time really doesn’t matter when it comes to immediate impact on voter turnout. And again, when we shortened from 40 to 29 days, we had record turnout. I don’t see why that would be a concern. It clearly increased turnout in the last election.”

Grassley said the legislation will also help address concerns with voter fraud.

“Quite honestly, one of the biggest issues we hear about is election security,” he said. “I know folks would say, ‘Oh, yeah, you’re probably just, you know, you’re just mad about the presidential election.’ But I don’t think that’s what it’s about. If you look down in Georgia, at the two Senate races, a lot of feedback that we’re hearing from there is concerns about election security, election integrity.

“I think we do a great job here in Iowa, but I think there’s an expectation from the voters. We saw some things, maybe, in the last election, that we were uncomfortable with. And there’s an expectation from voters to make sure we do everything we can to have secure and safe elections, and so that’s why we’re being proactive with the bill.”

He acknowledged that opponents of the bill say it is an attempt at voter suppression. “We continue to hear that everything we’re going to pass is suppression and all these things,” he said. “I just don’t see that there’s evidence to support any of those claims.”

Other Statehouse Republicans have said the legislation is designed to address concerns with voter fraud in the 2020 elections – concerns that have been raised by Republicans nationally, but widely debunked or rejected by the courts.

Sen. Jason Schultz, R-Schleswig, has said he supports the legislation because it will address “the controversy that the country is going through right now. He cited “shady dealing” during the fall election, and specifically referenced the widely discredited claim that people in Philadelphia and other major cities were allowed to “game” the election.

Grassley said he expects the bill could easily be debated on the House floor as soon as next week.

View Source

Filed Under: Iowa

Primary Sidebar

More to See

Iowa lawmakers focus on free speech on campuses, social media platforms

A member of an anti-government militia holds a copy of the U.S. Constitution at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge Headquarters on Jan. 6, 2016 near Burns, Oregon. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty … [Read More...] about Iowa lawmakers focus on free speech on campuses, social media platforms

One-dose vaccine poised for FDA green light after advisory panel OK

Syringes are prepped with the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine before being administered at Richmond Raceway in Richmond, Va., Feb. 2, 2021. (Parker Michels-Boyce/ For the Virginia Mercury) WASHINGTON … [Read More...] about One-dose vaccine poised for FDA green light after advisory panel OK

Auditor: Local governments could save combined $375M with average solar installations

Iowa's state auditor says solar panels could save Iowa's cities, counties and school districts millions of dollars, based on reports about early installations. (Photo by Sirisak Boakaew | Getty … [Read More...] about Auditor: Local governments could save combined $375M with average solar installations

Footer

WELCOME!

Thanks for visiting Lost Prairie Press!

We hope you’ll enjoy news and perspective from the Midwest – specifically, Iowa, Illinois, Kansas and Missouri.

About/Contact

Privacy Policy

Recent

  • Lazlo’s Dinner on the Run, Fireworks Feast and Venue at Home feature family meals
  • Auditor: Local governments could save combined $375M with average solar installations
  • One-dose vaccine poised for FDA green light after advisory panel OK

Search

Copyright © 2021 · Lost Prairie Press