Warner, Tennant Square Off In Heated Secretary Of State Race

West Virginia’s Secretary of State holds a variety of responsibilities. The person on the job is tasked with overseeing elections, maintaining business registrations and licensing, and also keeping records on the executive branch, among other duties.

In this year’s general election, two candidates with experience in the post are squaring off against one another: Republican Mac Warner and Democrat Natalie Tennant. The two differ significantly in their vision for the office, and the race between them has gotten personal.

This election cycle, absentee mail-in voting has become one of the most partisan political battles, with President Donald Trump and other Republicans alleging — without significant evidence — that voting by mail would lead to rampant fraud.

Warner and Tennant — who both participated in a debate moderated by West Virginia Public Broadcasting — have offered starkly different perspectives on voting by mail.

For the state’s June 9 primary, Warner’s office saw to it that all of the state’s 1.2 million registered voters were mailed an application for an absentee ballot.

But that system changed for the general election, with Warner deciding to offer applications through an online portal or directly through the county clerks. He says local election officials consulted him on the matter.

We went back and we talked to the clerks afterwards — and the clerks were the ones who told me they did not want to send out the applications as they did in the primary,” Warner said. “The reason those applications were sent out was because we were under an emergency situation that the governor has put us under, where he told us to stay at home.”

Tennant argues the change in the absentee voting process has created a barrier for some voters who now likely expect an application to be mailed to them automatically.

“Mac can’t say on one hand, we had a successful primary election. We know we were all in agreement that folks use the absentee application when we had a quarter of a million West Virginians use it,” Tennant said. “But then what he did was pull the rug out from underneath them. “

Tennant said she has heard from many voters that they are anticipating getting absentee ballot applications.

“That is changing the rules mid-stream, and he’s making it more difficult by throwing a barrier up and saying that voters need to go online and ask for a ballot,” she said.

Absentee voting has been a point of division for the two candidates — even beyond the scope of the coronavirus pandemic. Tennant said she supports a system that would allow more opportunities for voters to submit ballots — including wider access to voting by mail and drop boxes for completed ballots.

“The way that I would make it even more secure is to allow the counties to have drop boxes. There have been several counties to ask the Secretary of State and here he goes again, putting another barrier around every corner. We need drop boxes because it would lighten the load for clerks. It would give confidence to the voters and it would lighten the load for the postal service.”

 

Warner argues that potential for fraud remains in the vote-by-mail system.

Following the June primary, Warner’s office — along with help of federal prosecutors — investigated one instance in which absentee ballot applications were tampered with. A Pendleton County mail carrier ultimately pleaded guilty to altering eight applications to favor Republicans.

Warner said his office’s election fraud unit did well in spotting that case. But he also said the stakes are too high to allow universal voting by mail — where ballots are automatically sent to every registered voter — in West Virginia.

I am very confident in the U.S. Postal Service. However, I use the example: if you’ve won the Mega Millions lottery, would you take that ticket and stick it in the mail? Or would you walk it down in person?” Warner asked. “We’ve all experienced some problem with the postal service. Although, 96 percent of the time they do deliver things on time, as scheduled. But when it comes to elections, we’re in a situation where somebody waits until the last minute to stick that ballot in the mail — yes, they may run into some difficulties with it either being postmarked, rerouted or delivered on time.”

While Warner and Tennant part ways on a variety of issues — including the use of mobile voting technology or how the state’s business licensing division should be run — the two candidates both look back to the moment when Tennant handed the office over to Warner following the 2016 election.

Tennant points out wrongful termination lawsuits brought by former employees Warner fired, which wound up costing the state more than $3.2 million. For Tennant, those firings were personal — not only for her former employees, but for her. She noted circumstances surrounding one worker’s termination.

“Layna was just two weeks shy of 20 years of service to West Virginia. Without cause, without thought, without even being interviewed by Mac Warner, she was gone and jobless — as everything that she had accomplished meant nothing,” Tennant said. “Mac illegally fired her that day and 15 other people, and West Virginia suffered a great blow when those careers were abruptly ended.”

Warner argues those employees were at will and were “bogging down operations” when he took over. He blames those employees for poor work, a situation in which he maintains Tennant was responsible.

“There was nothing — absolutely nothing — illegal about that whatsoever. And in fact, I gave them two weeks’ notice so that they could find other employment if they so chose,” Warner said. “So let’s be straight about this. That was a housecleaning project that needed to be done. Any money that was paid by the state was the result of the failures of my predecessor, not me.”

Voters in West Virginia will now have to decide whether to stick with Warner or reseat Tennant as Secretary of State.

Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 3.

Absentee Voting Process Tweak Renews Debate In Secretary Of State Race

All registered voters in West Virginia will be able to use the ongoing coronavirus pandemic as a reason to get an absentee ballot for the November general election. But a tweak in the process of how voters can access those applications — and, thus, an absentee ballot — has revived a debate over voting during the pandemic in the race for West Virginia’s Secretary of State. 

Secretary of State Mac Warner announced Monday that all registered voters can use concerns over the coronavirus pandemic as a reason to vote absentee.  For the Nov. 3 general election, Warner says voters will be able to access that application through an online portal beginning Aug. 11. Voters will also have the option to contact their county clerks and request a ballot by mail, phone or fax, according to a news release from the Secretary of State’s office. 

The announcement highlights slight — but potentially impactful — changes in West Virginia’s pandemic voting process. Just last week, Warner’s office released an “after action review” on the state’s primary election, in which nearly half of ballots cast were done so absentee. 

In the lead up to the state’s June 9 primary election — which was delayed from its original date of May 12 due to the coronavirus pandemic — county clerks mailed applications for absentee ballots to all registered voters. Warner says the newly announced process will eliminate opportunities for fraud.

“We’re going to improve that. We’re going to let people use a portal where they can apply automatically and that moves about half of the human touches and that’s where the errors can occur,” Warner told West Virginia Public Broadcasting by phone Monday evening.

Warner opposes a universal vote-by-mail system for the state, but says he is not opposed to using the mail to vote absentee. The difference, he says, is voters taking the step to complete an application for an absentee ballot.

“We learned there’s a lot of problems with the mail system. Nothing against the mail carriers in the post office — they do a wonderful job. In fact, they advertise you know, 96 percent delivery on time rate, so forth — and in the usual world that may be fine,” Warner said. “But in the election world, you just can’t have 4 percent or any number of ballots not arriving by election day or the day after with the postmarks and so forth.”

Of the 1.2 million registered voters, 262,503 ballots were requested in the June primary. Of those requested ballots, 224,777 were returned, according to data from the Secretary of State’s office

“If we had sent ballots out to all those people, you would have had 800,000 ballots out there. Think of the opportunities for fraud — not to mention the waste and abuse that occurs in that,” he said. “So I am not a proponent of vote by mail.”

But with Warner up for re-election in November, former Secretary of State Natalie Tennant, a Democrat, said any change in the process between the primary and the general election is unnecessary and will confuse voters. 

“Why would you change a good thing? Why wouldn’t you build off of something positive? You can’t tell me that this is a good thing. When voters have to learn something new again,” Tennant said. 

Tennant is challenging Warner on the November ballot to regain the position as the state’s top election official and business administrator. She argues that — given the process during the primary — many voters may be anticipating an absentee ballot application to automatically come to them. 

“Changing this right in the middle is changing the rules of the game. It is making West Virginia take a step backward. It’s confusing, and it makes it harder to vote,” she said.

Warner says Tennant’s claim has yet to show any real effect on voter turnout. 

“That’s a manufactured problem that doesn’t exist. We are still three — a little bit more than three months — away from the general election,” he said. “Look back at the primary, we got started about two months out making these decisions and so forth. So we’ve got a month more.”

Mail-in absentee ballots have become a flashpoint for political debate in the era of the coronavirus with Democrats pushing for wider access and Republicans arguing the option leads to fraud. In West Virginia, a task force — which included Warner and the state’s two federal prosecutors — has landed a guilty plea on an indictment of mail fraud stemming from a postal worker tampering with eight absentee ballot applications ahead of the June primary. 

However, election security experts agree that fraud from mail-in voting is extremely rare. According to MIT political science professor Charles Stewart, fraud is so infrequent that it’s tremendously unlikely to shift the outcome of an election. 

“It’s going to be like a drop of food dye in an Olympic swimming pool,” Stewart said by phone Tuesday. “And whether it’s a 50-meter pool or a 25-meter pool, it’s still going to be just a really small amount. And that’s the evidence.”

Stewart said voting by mail during the pandemic has forced many Republican election officials to enact policies that they would likely not have considered under other circumstances.

“What happened during the primary was obviously an emergency. We see a lot of officials — and I would say, a significant number of Republicans such as Mac Warner — undertaking some political risk to themselves, undertaking actions that that many Republicans normally would not take. For instance, you know, mailing the application to everybody.”

But with the pandemic ongoing for some time and voters more used to going out in public and taking care of other business, Stewart believes that more people will actually show up to the polls rather than make use of mail-in absentee ballots in November. 

“It’s also going to be the case there’s more what’s called low-propensity voters — inexperienced voters who are not going to know how to or it’s going to be difficult for them to learn how to request the ballot — or maybe to plan far enough ahead of time to get the ballot in time for it to be returned on time,” Stewart said. “So those voters are also going to be more likely to vote in person.”

With two experienced elections officials on the ballot in November, Stewart notes that issues related to mail-in ballots take on a new context. He says the switch from policies before the pandemic — to changes in the primary process and, now, the general — are colored by politics. 

“The point that I’m just trying to make is that, as in much of politics, there is no right answer. There are values that are being traded off in a policy decision like this — as in all policy decisions,” Stewart said. 

West Virginia Public Broadcasting has scheduled a virtual debate for the Secretary of State’s race between Warner and Tennant to take place in early September. The event will air on WVPB television stations at a later date. 

Democrat Natalie Tennant Announces She's Seeking Return As West Virginia's Secretary Of State

Former Democratic West Virginia Secretary of State Natalie Tennant is running to win back her seat in 2020. 

Tennant made the announcement Thursday morning in a video emailed to news media and her supporters. 

“At this critical time for our state, it is important that our leaders honor the calling of public service by taking seriously the responsibilities and trust West Virginians place in them,” she said in the video. “That’s why I am announcing I am running to serve as your Secretary of State.”

In a press materials accompanying her announcement, Tennant touted a record of improving business licensing, providing greater access to elections and more transparency in government. 

The Democratic stalwart was twice elected as the West Virginia’s Secretary of State — first in 2008 and again in 2012. However, she lost the seat to Republican Mac Warner in 2016 by a margin of less than 2 percentage points.  

Aside from holding office as the state’s chief elections officer, Tennant made a failed bid in 2011 to be her party’s nominee for a gubernatorial special election. She also lost a U.S. Senate race in 2014 to Republican Shelley Moore Capito.

According to campaign finance reports, Tennant has so far raised more than $20,000 for the Secretary of State race. She filed as an undeclared candidate in September. 

Warner, who is also registered as undeclared, has nearly $30,000 on hand for his 2020 re-election bid. 

The official filing period for the upcoming election runs from January 13 to January 25, 2020.

 

W.Va. Secretary of State Sending Postcards to Unregistered Voters

West Virginia Secretary of State Natalie Tennant’s office is sending postcards to residents who may be eligible to vote but haven’t registered.

The deadline to register to vote in the general election is Oct. 18. The election is Nov. 8.

The postcards are also being sent to help ensure that the state’s voter rolls are up to date. The mailing list was compiled by comparing statewide voter registration records from the West Virginia Division of Motor Vehicles.

The mailing is part of the state’s membership with the Electronic Registration Information Center, a nonprofit organization that works to help states improve voter roll accuracy and increase voter registration access.

Anyone who believes a postcard was sent in error should check voter registration status at http://www.govotewv.com . For further questions, contact the local county clerk or Tennant’s office at (304) 558-6000.

W.Va. Secretary of State Files Early Re-Election Paperwork

  Natalie Tennant is eyeing another term as West Virginia’s secretary of state.

On Tuesday, the Democrat filed pre-candidacy paperwork to run for a third term as secretary of state.

In a crushing 2014 election for Democrats across the state and country, Tennant lost a U.S. Senate bid against Republican Shelley Moore Capito.

With Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin hitting term limits, Tennant’s name had popped up in discussions about next year’s open governor’s race.

In a 2011 special election, Tennant came in third in the Democratic primary for the governorship.

Filing for pre-candidacy lets someone start raising and spending money for the election. On pre-candidacy forms, people can pick an office or remain undeclared.

Capito Wins U.S. Senate, Helps Tip Federal Balance to GOP

A mere seconds after the polls closed across the state, national media outlets began calling the U.S. Senate race in favor of Republican Congresswoman Shelley Moore Capito.

The seat is being vacated by long-time Democratic Sen. Jay Rockefeller who announced his retirement last year.

Credit Ashton Marra / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Secretary of State Natalie Tennant campaigned up until the last minute in downtown Charleston for her bid for U.S. Senate.

For weeks, Democratic Secretary of State Natalie Tennant trailed Capito in the polls by double digits in some cases, but she remained confident Tuesday evening as she waved to potential voters on Washington Street in downtown Charleston surrounded by volunteers. That confidence, however, wasn’t enough to pull off a win.

Shortly after 8 p.m. Tuesday evening, Capito took the stage to accept her newly won seat.

“I want to be the first to share with you how optimistic I am about the future,” she said. “Around the state today West Virginia came together and made their voices heard to tell Washington that we can do better.”

Capito spoke to a packed room of supporters, saying it’s been nearly 60 years since the state sent a Republican to the Senate.

Just a few blocks away, Tennant conceded the race just after 8:30 p.m., thanking her family, staff and supporters.

“Tonight is not an end, it’s only a beginning,” Tennant said, “and I have said that West Virginia’s story all along is my story. I am proud and I look forward to writing the next chapter as your Secretary of State.”

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