The White House has spent months waging a furious campaign against vote-by-mail systems — even as Donald Trump and much of his team vote through the mail — trying to convince Americans that the process is inherently untrustworthy. The president and his operation have offered no proof to substantiate the claims, because no such proof exists.
As part of the pitch, however, Team Trump has repeatedly insisted that it’s perfectly comfortable with Americans casting absentee ballots through the mail. Is there a difference between postal balloting and absentee voting? Not really, but the White House has been eager — by some measures, desperate — to pretend otherwise.
That is, until yesterday.
“Whether you call it Vote by Mail or Absentee Voting, in Florida the election system is Safe and Secure, Tried and True,” the president wrote on Twitter. He went to “encourage all” Florida voters “to request a Ballot [and] Vote by Mail!”
There’s no great mystery as to what prompted the unexpected tweet. If Trump loses Florida, where mail-in voting is expected to be common in the fall, he loses the election. If Trump convinces his Florida supporters that postal balloting is an evil societal scourge, they may be less likely to cast ballots. Therefore, the president who’s invested a ridiculous amount of time condemning voting by mail is suddenly encouraging his supporters to vote by mail.
Trump’s tweet even conceded what the reality-based community has been saying for months: there are no meaningful differences between mail-in voting and absentee voting.
It wasn’t long before reporters asked why he suddenly changed his message, but only for one state.
President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he had “total confidence” in Florida’s ability to administer a vote-by-mail system in November, but he cast doubt on other states’ ability to deliver reliable results. “Florida has got a great Republican governor, and it had a great Republican governor,” Trump said when asked by a reporter to explain why his comfort with mail-in voting did not appear to extend to other states.
Putting aside whether Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) is actually “great” at his job — a dubious assertion, to be sure — the president’s argument seemed to be that voting by mail in the Sunshine State is fine because he likes those who’ve recently sat in the governor’s office.








