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CA has mailed millions of ballots on the sole issue of approving Newscum's new redistricting map that he hijacked from the voter-approved independent redistricting commission.
Voters MUST provide signature, name, address, phone, and date of signing on the back of the return envelope. The voter's name and other identifying information is also preprinted on the return envelope.
THERE IS NO PRIVACY SLEEVE FOR THE BALLOT THAT IS INSERTED INTO THE BALLOT RETURN ENVELOPE. So whoever opens the envelope can match your name and address with your vote (NO PRIVACY) on the Newscum's attempt to grab more Democrat seats in the U.S. House of Representatives IN THE MID-TERMS to try to paralyze Trump's agenda during the last 2 years of his term. Newscum is trying to change the district lines throughout the entire state to minimize the impact of its MILLIONS of Republican and Independent voters on which Representatives go to Washington DC after the midterms.
Apparently, the lack of privacy is a thing on mail-in ballots in many states.
Article:
"...Twenty states, Guam and the Virgin Islands require absentee voters be provided with a secrecy sleeve. A secrecy sleeve—sometimes known as a privacy sleeve, inner envelope or identification envelope—is a paper document intended to protect voters’ privacy by separating their identity and signature from their ballot.
* After completing an absentee/mail ballot, a voter places it inside the secrecy sleeve, which then goes inside the return envelope. *
"Other states or jurisdictions may choose to use secrecy sleeves. In Maryland (Md. Election Code Ann. § 9-310) and Michigan (Mich. Comp. Laws § 168.764a), for example, local election boards can choose whether to include them. Meanwhile, Iowa requires secrecy sleeves only in certain circumstances (Iowa Code § 53.8).
"The additional paper can increase the cost of ballot mailings, however. And secrecy sleeves may be unnecessary if the election jurisdiction has a different process to ensure a voter’s privacy when ballots are opened.
"The states in the table below are those that require providing a secrecy sleeve to absentee voters....
See:
https://www.ncsl.org/elections-and-campaigns/table-13-states-that-must-provide-secrecy-sleeves-for-absentee-mail-ballots
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Who and how one votes USED TO BE protected from prying eyes.
Apparently not any more, in many jurisdictions, at least when it comes to MAIL-IN ballots (the only way you can vote on the redistricting initiative in CA).