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Senate adopts bills to allow swifter ballot counting

Courtesy senate.michigan.gov

The Michigan Senate adopted a bill Tuesday that would allow many local governments to prepare absentee ballots to be opened and processed the evening before Election Day. Local clerks say that could shave hours off the process of tallying the ballots.

It’s an election where more absentee votes than ever will be cast – and with fewer poll workers to help count them.

Ottawa County Clerk Justin Roebuck says that creates a problem. Every vote needs to be counted, but people get suspicious if the counting drags out.

“There is a trust factor involved when election results are delayed," said Roebuck. "I think people begin to lose trust in the process.”

This bill would only apply to elections in roughly Michigan 70 cities of 25 thousand or more people. Republicans say the state can use this experience to decide whether to apply these rules more widely in future elections.