No one should have to wait more than half an hour to vote, a presidential panel has concluded, part of a long-awaited report on how to fix the voting experience.
The “problems that hinder the efficient administration of elections are both identifiable and solvable,” concluded the report, released Wednesday by the Presidential Commission on Election Administration.
In addition to specific tools for reducing lines, it recommended increased early voting, expanded online voting, and more accurate voter rolls as ways to make the voting system run more smoothly.
In remarks to reporters, President Obama called the report “outstanding” and said: “Lots of the recommendations are common sense, ones that can be embraced by all of us.”
Some voters in Florida and Virginia waited eight hours or more to cast a ballot in 2012, prompting a pledge from Obama during his Election night victory speech to fix the problem. To do so, he appointed a commission co-chaired by the top lawyers for his and Mitt Romney’s campaigns, Bob Bauer and Ben Ginsberg, respectively.
The 10-member panel, which included business leaders, academics, and election officials, conducted a six-month study of election best practices, including several public hearings.
The report is “one of the most effective and credible documents on meaningful voting reform issued in many years,” Rick Pildes, a prominent election law professor at New York University and a top lawyer on Obama’s campaign, wrote online.
The half-hour wait time for voting “is now likely to become a benchmark against which election systems and administrators are going to be judged,” Pildes wrote. “It will provide a key focal point for organizations and journalists to assess elections.”









