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Time to End the Endless Elections

Posted on Wednesday, November 12, 2025
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by David Catron
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29 Comments
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One of the more surprising results from last Tuesday’s elections was the victory of Democrat Jay Jones in the Virginia Attorney General race. Jones had been mired in multiple scandals, including apparently misleading a court about the nature of community service performed for a reckless driving charge, and leaked text messages showing him fantasizing about murdering a former Republican colleague and wishing death on children.

When these stories broke, most election analysts assumed Jones was politically finished. But these pundits failed to consider the Old Dominion’s protracted early voting process.

By the time the text message scandal broke on October 3, Virginians had already been voting for more than two weeks, with hundreds of thousands of votes already banked. Jones’s margin of victory was 194,475 votes out of 3,311,991 ballots cast. He may well have lost were it not for early voting.

Virginia’s protracted early voting period is by no means unique. Fully 47 states allow no-excuse early voting—both in-person and by mail. Its advocates argue that early voting eases Election Day congestion by reducing long lines and wait times at polling places, as well as ensuring that bad weather or unforeseen emergencies don’t inhibit people from voting.

Proponents likewise claim that early voting improves poll worker performance, allows election officials time to correct registration errors, and allows for fixing voting system problems with greater ease. They also inevitably insist that racism is behind any attempt to reduce the length of time devoted to in-person early voting and denounce all efforts to add common-sense security features for mail-in ballots.

Nonetheless, as the Jay Jones scandal clearly illustrates, it is obvious that extensive and universal early voting can create a quiet crisis of democracy.

The voters who cast their ballots weeks before Election Day often have far less information about the candidates and the issues than do their counterparts who wait to vote until Election Day. When there are late-breaking developments in campaigns (the fabled “October surprise”) that are self-evidently important to the choices made by voters, those who have already cast their ballots are stuck with their choices.

The recent election isn’t the first time Virginia has illustrated this problem. In 2021, early voting had begun two weeks before Democrat Terry McAuliffe committed his now-famous debate blunder, where he stated that parents shouldn’t be telling schools what to teach.

In a far more consequential example, in 2020, millions of Americans had already cast their ballots by the time the Hunter Biden laptop scandal broke. It is entirely possible that early voting and the Big Tech cover-up of the story changed the outcome of that election.

All of which begs the question: Whatever happened to Election Day? Until a couple of decades ago, voting in the United States was a straightforward exercise that required registered voters to appear at local polling places on Election Day and cast their ballots in person. A small number were permitted to vote absentee if they were stationed overseas in the military or could show that they were otherwise unable to get to the polls.

This system, with a few minor variations, was used in all 50 states and revealed the winners of most elections with alacrity. Though not perfect, it was generally efficient, secure, and implicitly trusted by the vast majority of voters.

Nonetheless, in the late 1990s, Democrats began pushing for a number of fundamental changes to this system. They insisted that it contained all manner of vaguely defined flaws, but the actual impetus for “reform” was their decreasing ability to win majorities in federal and state elections.

From 1980 through 2004, for example, no Democrat presidential nominee received a majority of the popular vote. Not even Bill Clinton managed to reach 50 percent in either of his White House wins. Meanwhile, in 1994, Democrats lost control of Congress, and they were increasingly losing control of state legislatures and governorships all across the country.

Consequently, the new millennium ushered in a big Democrat push for the least secure alternative to the voting model described above: all mail-in elections combined with early voting. Oregon was the first state to enact such a system in 2000. Now, eight states have all-mail elections — California, Colorado, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Vermont, and Washington. All of these states send everyone on their voter rolls postage-paid ballots, which are returned by the USPS and vote harvesters both before and after Election Day.

Inevitably, all but one of these states became Democrat fiefdoms in which Republican candidates for office rarely win.

The increased emphasis on mail-in voting in these states, and every other blue state, has created a disincentive for them to keep their voter rolls clean. Consequently, despite the requirements of federal law, they refuse to remove deceased, duplicate, and non-resident voters from their rolls. They also decline to remove registrants with birth dates that indicate the voters are impossibly old.

By allowing such registrants to accumulate on their voter rolls, these states are able to mail out ballots, which can be harvested and used to commit fraud. According to a report from the Public Interest Legal Foundation, the worst offender is California:

After accounting for polling place votes and rejected ballots in November 2022, there were more than 10 million ballots left outstanding, meaning election officials do not know what happened to them. It is fair to assume that the bulk of these were ignored or ultimately thrown out by the intended recipients. But, under mass mail elections, we can only assume what happened. Mail voting practices have an insurmountable information gap. The public cannot know how many ballots were disregarded, delivered to wrong mailboxes, or even withheld from the proper recipient by someone at the same address.

Early voting and metastasizing mail-in ballots are just the most obvious assaults on the integrity of our elections.

If the Republicans want to restore trust and integrity in our elections, they must pass national election reform, and President Trump must sign it into law as soon as possible. Ideal legislation would require all voters to provide a photo ID and citizenship verification. It must mandate quick and accurate reporting of results by requiring all ballots to arrive by Election Day except for military personnel stationed overseas. Finally, the legislation must ban universal mail-in elections and ballot harvesting, while limiting early voting to a single week before Election Day.

Naturally, the Democrats and their legacy media mouthpieces will denounce this as an attack on “our democracy.” But Article I, Section 4, Clause 1 of the U.S. Constitution gives Congress the last word on how we conduct elections: “The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations.”

The one major hurdle standing in the way is the Senate filibuster rule. Democrats have made clear that they will never allow common-sense election reforms to clear the upper chamber.

But – for better or for worse – that roadblock may be coming down. If it does, Republicans should seize the moment and act without delay.

Editor’s Note: AMAC Action has been involved in numerous advocacy efforts to pass Voter ID, ban non-citizen voting, and enact other common-sense election integrity measures in states throughout the country. AMAC members played a critical role in securing more than a dozen election integrity victories in 2024 alone.

David Catron is a Senior Editor at the American Spectator. His writing has also appeared in PJ Media, the American Thinker, the Providence Journal, the Catholic Exchange and a variety of other publications.

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Max
Max
6 months ago

Overall, Jones should have been immediately eliminated from running until a proper investigation could be conducted. He should not be allowed to take the office until then.

Lieutenant Beale
Lieutenant Beale
6 months ago

You or I would be paid a visit by LEO’s if we made public threats against an official we didn’t like, let alone being elected to Attorney General of Virginia.
Jay Jones is an utter disgrace.

FedUp
FedUp
6 months ago

I worked the polls back in the 70s. Yea, I’m old. But back then we used paper ballots and mechanical voting machines that printed summary totals. All results for the precinct were tallied and posted in a window BEFORE the actual votes/machine counts were sent to the county board of elections. If the results returned by the county board didn’t match what the precincts tallied, we immediately new there was a problem.
Today’s process is rife with fraud opportunities. There are so many problems and/or opportunities to introduce fraud into the process that it would take a few paragraphs to list them all.
And it seems we regularly here about things like “boxes” of ballots that magically appear after election day and coincidentally, after the first vote tally was completed. And surprise (not really), the boxes of “newly found” votes always seem to contain more than enough votes to flip the race over to the democrat candidate.
Or large numbers of voting machines that somehow decide to not work in key republican areas on election day.
And security footage showing the same people stuffing dozens of ballots at a time into a voting drop box.
Or local officials who decide to waive the need for signature verification.
Yes, it’s amazing how these things keep happening.

So, there needs to be basic process and regulations at the federal level that would then allow the states to run their own election and processes within those constraints. For example, every in person voter must show an ID, ballots received after 11:59PM on election day are not counted, mail-in ballots are only valid for military, people who can prove they will be out of the country, and those physically unable to get to the polls in person.

LOVER OF GOD AND AMERICA
LOVER OF GOD AND AMERICA
6 months ago

I CAN’T BELIEVE 8 STATES ONLY ALLOW MAIL-IN VOTING! HERE IN TX, I COULD DO MAIL-IN BECAUSE OF MY AGE (80) AND INFIRMITIES, BUT I GO WITH MY HUSBAND TO VOTE, AND THEY SEND OUT A ELECTION OFFICIAL TO OUR VEHICLE TO CK MY REGISTRATION AND TO LET ME FILL OUT THE FORM FOR MYSELF! HOW GREAT IS THAT!

Wilbur
Wilbur
6 months ago

The NEW Socialist-Communist party (formally known and recognized as the DemoRAT party), will ONLY endorse someone who is EXTREMELY CORRUPT, DESPISES AMERICA, LOVES ILLEGALS AND OTHER CRIMINALS, IS A TRUE-AND-TRUE SOCIALIST OR COMMUNIST, FISCALLY CLUELESS, HAS INCRURABLE TDS, HATES ALL LAW ENFORCEMENT AND DEMANDS THEY ARE DEFUNDED, LOVES TAXING THE WORKING CLASS, SUPPORTS AN ENDLESS WELFARE STATE, HAS GRAVE DISRESPECT FOR THE MILITARY, SUPPORTS MEN IN FEMALE SPORTS AND MUTILATING CHILDREN, AND IDOLIZES OTHER PERVERTED AND INSANE IDEAS.

And what is tragic and terrifying is that there are enough perverted, insane, and America-hating voters who elect this new breed of EVIL. ALL OF WHOM ARE AMERICA’S TRUE ENEMIES WITHIN.

BeeKba
BeeKba
6 months ago

At the very least, voters should be allowed to go IN PERSON WITH ID and change a vote that shows a candidate was exposed for inexcusable behaviors and deeds.

Kurt S
Kurt S
6 months ago

Shows one how retarded Virginian voters are. I don’t have a problem with voter I.D. It should be mandatory. I do have to admit, I live in a small town and all the polling volunteers know me so I generally don’t get asked for I.D. I do show my I.D. (driver’s license) so they can look me up on the the voter registration list as I have a tough last name to spell.

Horace
Horace
6 months ago

The Democratic Party should be forced to change their name to reflect what they are doing. They have been in this business a long time. Cheaters, Inc. should be their required name.

Horace
Horace
6 months ago

The Democrat party should be forced to change their party name to Cheaters, INC.

Ninarae
Ninarae
6 months ago

I live in Nevada. The small town I live in is basically Republican based. This is true of many small towns in Nevada. However our elections seem to be determined by the two major cities, Las Vegas & the Reno area. We ALWAYS end up with Democrats sent to Washington. Early voting and Mail-In voting have destroyed the voting system in Nevada. There’s little or no attempt to determine if the vote comes from an Illegal or a Non-resident. It’s very frustrating! I keep hoping and asking for a change in the voting system. Vegas is packed with Illegals & Transitioning people. Little or NO attempt is made to verify if these people are truly eligible to vote! The Mail-in system is ridiculous! It’s far past time to restructure our Voting System.

Steve
Steve
6 months ago

So AMAC is worried about the elections. Let’s have a look first up nutjob city New York . Have a guy who had 38 percent backing by your reporting so where did the 62 percent go . Have the King of Whaun virus Cumo . Now that is a real good candidate who under his watch 25,000 Americans died . I am surprised that a republican with a backbone stayed in the race to give people an option. I wish more republicans had guts like that and start challenging these nutjobs . Now to Jersey it’s a toilet , and to Virginia half the state is government workers and other half afraid of their own shadows to allow some nutjob go around saying he will kill people . So in summary you get what you vote for and Mr. President not a penny to these nutjob states !!

Steve de Kater
Steve de Kater
6 months ago

No early voting whatsoever! Absentee voting only when it can be proven beyond any shadow of a doubt that it is absolutely necessary; signed affadavits are a must.
For those voting in person, voter ID is critical. Polls should be open at least 12 hours; if you can’t find the time during this 12 hour window, tough. Make it mandatory that one be given time to get to the polls during this 12 hour window.
Voting is both a right and a RESPONSIBILITY. Respect and appreciate it!

Stephen Russell
Stephen Russell
6 months ago

Modify Filabuster rule
Amend rule
Term limits
Donors pay for elections IE campaigns NOT Fed $$
Everything is Open & Public
More work in House & Senate less on Campaign trail
ALL can help with National election laws
Overide state laws

Stephen
Stephen
6 months ago

I think the only mail in ballots should be for absentee and disabled voters, not for those who prefer to vote early by mail than in person. As one who has been working at my polling place for my county election commission all of us who do this are asked to request an early voting ballot because the election commission cannot guarantee we will be assigned to our polling place and have enough time to vote on the day of the election. I have with one exception been assigned to work at my polling place and for this reason for most elections I did not request an early voting ballot. One time my assignment was as an on call extra. This time I received a phone call on this primary election day telling me to report to the polling place that was my place to vote. I prefer voting in person at my polling place to early voting by mail or early voting drop box.

Ken
Ken
6 months ago

Voting must be same day, in person, w/voting I.d.
Mail-in only allowed for out of state constituents, military members, etc.

Melinda C
Melinda C
6 months ago

There are many more good reasons to not have early voting than in favor of. It just makes cheating easier, as does all mail in voting. Here in WA state we haven’t had a republican governor since all mail in voting started. It’s very discouraging.

Sam
Sam
6 months ago

BY GRANNIES, I SAY WE vote ON IT!!! Wait, what?

John Shipway
John Shipway
6 months ago

If the Republicans truly want to restore trust and integrity into the political process perhaps they can convince Emperor of the Globe, Trump, to release the Epstein Files in total as the man swore to when campaigning. After getting elected and when questioned by a reporter about releasing the Epstein Files, the cashew peckered Orange Old Man replied ‘Epstein who?”
Yep, great way to restore trust and integrity. Even if the pompous realtor from Queens did have a peculiar fondness for little kids he should come clean. I’m sure his former pole dancing or whatever, wife will forgive him.

Silhouette of Woman Kneeling in Prayer and Surrender. A silhouette of a woman kneeling down with her hands in the air, praying, thanking, and surrendering to God.
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California Governor Gavin Newsom (C) speaks as Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (L) listens at a press conference near the closed I-10 elevated freeway following a large pallet fire, which occurred Saturday at a storage yard beneath the freeway, on November 13, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
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