A long-promised directive from Wyoming Secretary of State Chuck Gray came Wednesday when he told the stateâs 23 county clerks they should not provide ballot drop boxes for the upcoming 2024 election.
In a two-page letter, Gray announced that heâs rescinding the 2020 directive issued by former Secretary of State Ed Buchanan, which explicitly allowed the use of drop boxes in Wyoming elections because of COVID-19 concerns. These boxes were offered in certain locations to voters during the 2020 and 2022 elections.
âGiven the differing interpretations of my predecessorsâ support for drop boxes, I want to be unequivocally clear: I do not believe drop boxes represent a safe, secure or statutory basis for absentee voting,â Gray wrote. âFor this reason, they should not be used in the 2024 election and beyond.â
Gray did not respond when asked by Cowboy State Daily if he would consider recommending Attorney General Bridget Hill take legal action against counties that continue to offer ballot drop boxes in the upcoming election. His letter also stops short of explicitly banning their use.
Platte County Clerk Malcolm Ervin, whoâs also president of the Wyoming County Clerks Association, said Gray gave him a call Tuesday night to inform that the letter would be coming the next day. As a result, the 23 county clerks held a meeting Wednesday afternoon to discuss the matter, after which they issued a formal statement in response.
In short, the clerks disagree with Gray and believe it's within the discretion of each clerk to determine if drop boxes are legal and a right fit for their election.
âOur great state offers a myriad of differences from one corner to the next, and for that reason a blanket solution does not always serve those distinct populations in the most practical manner,â the clerks wrote in their response.
When speaking to Cowboy State Daily following the meeting, Ervin said heâs aware of eight counties at this point that still plan to offer drop boxes despite Grayâs directive, but added this number could still increase or decrease before election day.
Julie Freese, Fremont County clerk, told Cowboy State Daily prior to the meeting that her county planned to offer the boxes this election.
What Does The Law Say?
Ballot drop boxes arenât specifically addressed anywhere in state law. W.S. 22-9-113 states that each qualified elector shall have their ballots âdelivered to the clerkâ in their county, but makes no closer reference than that. The clerks argue that, âWithout judicial interpretation or legislative clarity, we continue to hold our interpretation as the same.â
âAs the chief election officers of our respective counties, we are consistently listening to the concerns of our constituents,â the clerks wrote. âThe voices of our constituents as a whole help guide our decisions on this, and many other, important election administration decisions.â
Gray argues that a strict interpretation of the law should be taken on election code. He finds the fact that certain counties are allowing drop boxes is âproblematicâ as the state election code is supposed to be applied uniformly throughout the state.
âConsistent interpretation of the election code, not interpretation based on reaching a preset conclusion, is pivotal,â he wrote.
Ervin said Buchananâs directive did not initiate the first use of ballot drop boxes in Wyoming and that they were used in certain counties for a long time prior to 2020. During the 2022 election, seven counties used the boxes.
11th Hour?
Only about a month and a half remains before early voting begins in Wyoming for the public at large. Ervin said certain counties had already sent out letters to printers with instructions about their drop boxes by the time Gray sent his letter out.
Although he described Grayâs letter as âcutting it close,â in regard to the timing of the upcoming election, Ervin also doesnât believe it would have made much difference if it had been sent a few months earlier.
âIf it had been sent out earlier there would have been an opportunity to talk about that more, but I wouldnât say it was the 11th hour,â Ervin said. âEarlier would have been better.â
The Boxes And Gray
Grayâs stance on the issue of ballot drop boxes was hardly a mystery beforehand as he made banning them a hallmark promise of his 2022 campaign.
During the campaign, Gray even hosted free showings of â2000 Mules,â a controversial movie that relied on questionable evidence to argue that drop boxes had led to the 2020 presidential election being rigged.
Grayâs Wednesday letter stops short of trying to ban drop boxes altogether through internal rulemaking, but makes it clear he finds them already illegal under Wyoming law. He does not find the boxes a safe or legal mechanism for delivering an absentee ballot.
Further, Gray argues that since most Wyoming counties donât use the boxes, it shows that the people of Wyoming donât want them.
âInstead of writing off the publicâs fears and using worn-out mainstream media-driven slogans like âmisinformation,â I believe you should listen to their concerns,â Gray wrote. âListening is paramount to election integrity.â
Ervin disagreed and said just because a county doesnât use them doesnât mean they find them to be illegal.
âI would hate to say just because a county is not using one means they disagree with its use,â he said.
Many proponents of the boxes argue they make it easier for voters to turn in their ballots and participate in elections. Farther right conservatives like Gray want more restrictive measures put in place for elections and argue the boxes operate as a vehicle for election fraud.
The clerks disagree that ballot drop boxes are illegal.
âWe hold that the use of ballot drop boxes as a method of ballot delivery is safe, secure and statutorily authorized,â the clerks wrote.
Although Gray argued that the boxes are âunattendedâ and âunstaffed,â Ervin said every drop box used during the 2022 election in Wyoming was under 24/7 camera surveillance. He also stressed that not every ballot turned in at ballot drop boxes is automatically accepted.
As far as the possibility of being sued for offering the boxes, Ervin said thatâs a risk the clerks face on a myriad of issues every election.
âI always prepare for that inevitability,â he said.
Leo Wolfson can be reached at leo@cowboystatedaily.com.