Just like last year we'll be closing for a couple of weeks for Christmas/New Years.
Why can't mail in votes be cut off some weeks prior to actual election day? Count those first.
Early voting works great. You casually go in, take your time, vote as you like and it's input right away. They check you ID too. Mail in votes leave too much margin for error. How do you know YOUR vote was in fact received? Voting the day of didn't seem as chaotic as most would think either, at least not at my precinct.
Side note: How many do you know that did not vote for one reason or another? Me? 3
You really don't have to count mail-in votes ahead of time, and doing so runs the risk of vote counts leaking out, which we know influences subsequent voters, hence the requirement that news networks not report vote totals until polls close, and why many feel that it should wait until polls close in AK and HI.
The real key is not to accept mail in ballots after election day. There is absolutely no reason why there should be an extended deadline for mail in ballots....there's a reason why they (using the example of absentee ballots) have always been available far in advance of election day. Typically states have their ballots prepared by the end of September. The excuse given for states extending mail in deadlines was supposedly that Trump was cheating by telling the USPS to delay mail delivery. I have experienced no slowdowns in mail delivery. We mail checks for payments to all our vendors. And the emails you get back stating payment has been received show that for the last several months, mail delivery to all parts of the country has been normal, typically 1-2 days. And ballots only have to travel within your county, if we're talking about a mail-in ballot chosen in lieu of voting in person due to COVID fears.
I have voted in a number of jurisdictions around our state, including my largely Republican capital hometown, the Democrat controlled city where I went to college, the liberal Democrat run college town where I did graduate work, and the rural Republican area where I now live. I have only experienced long lines for voting in the Democrat towns. It seems they choose not to have as many precincts per capita on purpose in those towns. Same is true of DMV offices in those towns as well, now that I think about it.