From the BBC:
“US Postal Service halts
controversial changes amid voting furore”
The US Postal Service has
suspended new policies that were decried as an attempt to sabotage the 2020
election. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said on Tuesday he would reverse
operations changes that critics say would hamper mail-in voting. The u-turn comes
as Mr DeJoy is due to testify to Congress and at least 20 states were preparing
to sue. There is a fierce debate over postal funding in 2020, as record numbers
of Americans are expected to vote by mail. The US Postal Service (USPS) under
Mr DeJoy had begun what it said were cost-cutting measures in recent months. However,
in a sharp reversal, Mr DeJoy has now said that post office hours would not be
cut, and post boxes and sorting machines would stop being removed. Mr DeJoy, a
former Republican donor, also said overtime pay would continue to be approved
to ensure deliveries arrive on time. "To avoid even the appearance of any
impact on election mail, I am suspending these initiatives until after the
election is concluded," Mr DeJoy said in a statement.
What is US row over postal
service about? The development comes
as the row over the politicisation of the most popular US government agency has
become the top issue in the 2020 presidential campaign. Over the weekend,
former President Barack Obama - in what was regarded as his most high profile
criticism of his successor to date - accused Mr Trump of trying to
"actively kneecap" the postal service. Policies that were begun under
Mr DeJoy included removing mail boxes, cancelling delivery runs and closing
down sorting centres. Defenders of the changes said they were necessary to help
the USPS get out of financial debt. Its budget shortfall has risen to $160bn
(£122bn) amid a decade-long decline in mail volume. However, Mark Dimondstein,
the president of the American Postal Workers Union which represents more than
200,000 postal employees, told Fox News on Tuesday that the changes "are
truly slowing down mail, the customers see it... the postal workers see it -
mail is getting all backed up". Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the House,
cheered the postmaster's volte-face on Tuesday, telling reporters: "They
felt the heat and that's what we were trying to do, make it too hot to
handle." On Sunday, Ms Pelosi had recalled the House from a recess in order
to investigate the USPS policies. Mr DeJoy, a major political donor who was
appointed by Mr Trump to lead the USPS in May, is due to testify to a
Republican-led Senate committee on Friday, and then to a Democrat-led House
committee on Monday. Last week, President Trump said he rejected a funding
boost for the USPS to shore up a predicted influx mail-in voting, claiming
without evidence that it would lead to voter fraud and help Democrats. Voting
by mail is not new to the US. According to Reuters, approximately one in every
four voters cast ballots by mail in 2016.
^ This is a step in the right direction, but more needs to be done. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.