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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowFacing mounting public pressure and a crush of state lawsuits, President Donald Trump’s new postmaster general announced Tuesday he is halting some operational changes to mail delivery that critics blamed for widespread delays and warned could disrupt the November election.
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said he would “suspend” several of his initiatives—including the removal of the distinctive blue mailboxes that prompted an outcry—until after the election “to avoid even the appearance of impact on election mail.”
“We will deliver the nation’s election mail on time,” DeJoy said in a statement.
The abrupt reversal from DeJoy, who is set to testify Friday before the Senate, comes as more than 20 states, from New York to California, announced they would be suing to stop the changes. Several vowed they would press on, keeping a watchful eye on the Postal Service ahead of the election.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi is pushing ahead with Saturday’s vote to prevent election-year mail changes and provide emergency postal funds.
“I don’t, frankly, trust the postmaster general,” Pelosi said in San Francisco.
The crisis at the Postal Service has erupted as a major election year issue as DeJoy, a Republican donor who took control of the agency in June, has swiftly engineered cuts and operational changes that are disrupting mail delivery operations and raising alarms that Trump is trying to undermine the agency ahead of the election.
At the White House, Trump has flatly denied he is seeking to slow down the mail, even as he leveled fresh assaults Tuesday on mail-in voting and universal ballots. More Americans than ever are expected to choose to vote absentee during the coronavirus outbreak.
“You can’t have millions and millions of ballots sent all over the place, sent to people that are dead, sent to dogs, cats, sent everywhere,” Trump told reporters.
“This isn’t games and you have to get it right,” Trump said.
Some of the initiatives DeJoy said he was shelving until after the election had already been announced.
DeJoy said Tuesday he is halting the planned removal of mail-processing machines and blue collection boxes, as well as an initiative to change retail hours at post offices. He also said no mail processing facilities will be closed and said the agency has not eliminated overtime.
One initiative that DeJoy didn’t single out in his announcement was the newly imposed constraints on when mail can go out for delivery—a change postal workers have said is fueling delays. The statement also did not specify whether the agency would restore mail-sorting machines that have recently been taken offline.
A Postal Service spokesman declined to comment beyond DeJoy’s statement.
“What’s going on right now is nothing less than a full-on assault by this administration on the U.S. Postal Service, an institution that millions of Americans rely on every single day,” said Bob Ferguson, the attorney general in Washington state, at a news conference.
Ferguson and Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro announced they were leading collections of other states in suing to block service changes at the Postal Service, just as the postmaster was making his own statement Tuesday. Both Shapiro and Ferguson said they would not take DeJoy at his word.
“We need to see binding action to reverse these changes,” Shapiro said.
Trump made clear last week that he was blocking $25 billion in emergency aid to the Postal Service, acknowledging he wanted to curtail election mail operations, as well as a Democratic proposal to provide $3.6 billion in additional election money to the states to help process an expected surge of mail-in ballots.
Key Republicans are now sounding the alarm.
In the pivotal swing state of Ohio, Attorney General Dave Yost pleaded with Trump to postpone any needed changes to the Postal Service until after Election Day. GOP Sen. Rob Portman and other Republicans in Ohio’s congressional delegation urged DeJoy to “ensure timely and accurate delivery of election-related materials.”
Mark Dimondstein, president of the American Postal Workers Union, welcomed DeJoy’s decision but said the Postal Service needs COVID-related financial relief. “It’s time for Congress to deliver,” he said.
Pelosi is gaining GOP support for Saturday’s vote, according to two Republican aides granted anonymity to discuss the situation. She is calling lawmakers back to Washington for the “Delivering for America Act,” which would prohibit the Postal Service from implementing any changes to operations or the level of service it had in place on Jan. 1. The package would include the $25 billion the House has already approved as part of the COVID-19 rescue that is stalled in the Senate.
Democrats held events in cities nationwide, some pressuring Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to resume session. One protest was in Atlanta, where vulnerable GOP Sen. David Perdue faces a tough reelection.
McConnell, though, is unlikely to change the Senate schedule. In Kentucky, he said he viewed the postal legislation as an opportunity to resume talks over a broader COVID-19 relief bill. “I don’t think we’ll pass, in the Senate, a postal-only bill,” he told the Courier-Journal in an interview.
Ahead of the election, DeJoy, a former supply-chain CEO who took over the Postal Service in June, has sparked nationwide outcry over delays, new prices and cutbacks that could imperil not only voting, but what some call a lifeline for receiving mail prescriptions and other goods during the COVID-19 crisis.
Trump has defended DeJoy, but also criticized postal operations and claimed that universal mail-in ballots would be “a disaster.”
White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows told reporters that Trump “at no time” has pushed for a mail slow-down. “This President believes that the American people, casting their ballot, one at a time, will ultimately make sure that he’s the one elected,” he said.
The Postal Service is among the nation’s oldest and more popular institutions. Trump routinely criticizes its business model, but the financial outlook is far more complex, and includes an unusual requirement to pre-fund retiree health benefits that advocates in Congress want to undo.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer in a phone call Tuesday asked DeJoy to provide a “specific, written document” outlining exactly “what changes he is rescinding, which reforms will remain.”
Postal workers say they are increasingly worried about their ability to deliver for the fall election.
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The USPS delays are just the latest Trump/Republican attempt of voter disenfranchisement.
All these USPS efficiency initiatives were planned and scheduled long ago, before any discussion of possible increased use of mail-in voting. For that matter, how would moving USPS boxes discourage voting when the Dems “harvest” the mail-in ballots anyway? And the Dems have, of course, conflated the issue of traditional absentee voting by mail, which no one objects to, with vote harvesting of unsolicited ballots mailed out to every name on voter rolls that haven’t been cleaned up in decades. Then the Dem ground forces move in to make sure every unsolicited ballot is voted and notarization isn’t required. So just who filled out the ballot? No cause for concern here! This is how the Dems took almost every House seat in GOP stronghold, Orange Co., Ca.
Nice conspiracy theory. The voter rolls are routinely cleared, especially in Indiana. This is a tired trope with nothing to back it up. The process for counting absentee ballots and mail-in ballots is the same and has been used in several states, as well as throughout other nations of democracy, for years. Boring, boring, tired, boring argument. Sorry.
The article states that “Trump himself votes that way.” Sounds like a distortion of the truth used by Democrats – just tell half the story. He votes by absentee ballot, which is different than merely voting by mail with a mail-in ballot. No one, including Trump, objects to absentee voting. See Steven J. above.