During August 2020, Snopes readers inquired about a Facebook post in which a Florida woman described on video her alarm at discovering the letters “D” and “R” displayed on mail-in ballot envelopes sent to her and her brother, who live at the same address.
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The video was posted on Facebook by a Palm Beach County resident identified by local media as Tina Brown. It had been viewed hundreds of thousands of times, and it was even retweeted by U.S. President Donald Trump.
In the video, which lasted about two minutes, Brown pointed to a series of letters and numbers under the bar code on mail-in ballots sent to her, a registered Republican, and her brother, a registered Democrat, noting that on her envelope the series contains the letter “R,” while her brother’s contains the letter “D.”
“So a postal person could see this, if they’re a Democrat, and say, ‘oh, that’s an R. Let’s toss it, let’s just chuck it,” Brown stated in the video. She then added, “It is very important that we take these [ballots] and bring it to the voting places, and vote by person. Do not vote by mail. I’m telling you guys, you need to listen to this, OK, please be wary, alright.”
Here’s the Twitter post that included the video, which was retweeted by Trump:
More lies about 'Vote by mail'.
This is nothing but a Democrat attempt to cheat and STEAL this election.
Nothing they say about it will be true.
MSM reporting on this matter will echo their lies, build upon them, and use every trick they know to mislead you!
Here's one. Presonus notion 6 studio one 4 professional for mac. pic.twitter.com/ez6IHMvw6d
— Don Purser ???? (@DGPurser) August 16, 2020
The post likely attracted widespread attention because Trump had been making inaccurate statements casting doubt on the security of voting by mail, a process that would play a big role in the November 2020 general election due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
What was seen in the video — ballot envelopes with the letters “R” and “D” in their bar codes — was real. However, the commentary in the video was missing context, thus creating unnecessary anxiety about the labeling.
After the video went viral, Wendy Sartory Link, supervisor of elections for Palm Beach County, took to Twitter to explain why the political party-affiliated letters were present on the ballot envelopes.
The codes were there, she said, because Florida is one of nine states that holds closed primaries, meaning only people registered as Democrats or Republicans can vote in that state’s primary elections, and the ballots for each party are different. Furthermore, Link added, tampering with mail is a federal crime, and as of this writing, her office hasn’t received any reports of such tampering:
(1/3) Florida is a 'Closed Primary' state meaning voters can only vote for members of their party in the primary election. That is, Republicans can only vote for Republicans that are running against each other and Democrats can only vote for Democrats that are running against
— Wendy Sartory Link, PBC Supervisor of Elections (@pbcelections) August 17, 2020
(2/3) each other. Because of this, voters are sent ballots according to their party affiliation. It would be a federal crime for any post office employee to tamper with this process and we have received no such reports of anything like this happening.
— Wendy Sartory Link, PBC Supervisor of Elections (@pbcelections) August 17, 2020
(3/3) All ballots for the general election in November will look the same, as voters can vote for whoever they would like. There would be no way to tell the party affiliation of a voter based on their vote-by-mail ballot envelope for the general election.
— Wendy Sartory Link, PBC Supervisor of Elections (@pbcelections) August 17, 2020
It’s true that the letters “R” and “D” are on the outside of mail-in ballot envelopes that Brown and her brother received. However, those labels are only present on primary election ballots when registered Republican and Democratic voters receive different ballots in partisan elections. The labels are not present on general election ballot envelopes.
The Envelopes Please Game Play Online
Furthermore, the likelihood that ballots would be tampered with by Postal Service workers is highly unlikely. Andrea Avery, a spokesperson for the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, pointed out in an email to Snopes that all mail is “protected by more than 200 federal laws enforced by the United States Postal Inspection Service, one of the nation’s oldest federal law enforcement agencies.” Avery said:
The Inspection Service maintains robust mail theft, mail fraud, and security programs that identify, prevent and mitigate issues that could undermine the integrity of election mail. The Inspection Service works closely with the Postal Service as well as our local, state and federal partners, to address customer concerns involving election mail. While election mail is in the hands of our hard-working postal employees, the Inspection Service stands ready to protect it regardless of public health emergencies or natural disasters. To report law enforcement matters relating to election mail, call the Postal Inspectors at 1-877-876-2455
The Envelopes Please
A statement posted by the Palm Beach County Supervisor of Elections office noted that voters who cast ballots by mail can track their votes on the office’s website.