INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana’s first election to feature widespread mail-in balloting concluded Tuesday with long lines in Indianapolis, delaying the closure of some in-person voting locations by three hours.
Nearly 550,000 voters requested mail-in ballots — more than 10 times the number cast during the 2016 primary — after coronavirus concerns prompted officials to delay the primary by four weeks from its original May 5 date.
Republican President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden easily won Indiana’s delegates in their respective primaries.
Voters also chose Republican Victoria Spartz and Democrat Christina Hale as the candidates for an expected costly campaign for control of a central Indiana congressional seat. Democrat Frank Mrvan won the first step toward replacing longtime Rep. Pete Visclosky in the party’s northwestern Indiana stronghold.
VOTING ISSUES
Indianapolis voters faced waits of an hour or more at several voting locations throughout the day as Marion County had 22 sites open rather than its normal 270. Some candidates criticized county officials for that decision, but an election administrator said they had no other choice.
“It was impractical for us to have anything close to the normal number of locations during a pandemic,” said Russell Hollis, deputy director of the Marion County clerk’s office. It has been very difficult for us to recruit enough poll workers during the pandemic.”
A few Indianapolis polling locations remained open three hours past the normal 6 p.m. closing time so voters in line could cast ballots, Hollis said. Several other counties also drastically slashed the number of polling sites open Tuesday. St. Joseph County, for instance, had 12 sites open in and around South Bend rather than the 120 planned before the pandemic struck.
The long lines at Indianapolis polling sites was the only significant issue reported statewide, Indiana Secretary of State’s office spokesman Ian Hauer said.
Some people questioned whether voters need to wear face masks inside polling sites. While state election officials encouraged voters to wear face masks, Hauer said they were not required to do so.
Some county election administrators and candidates have said they worried that thousands of mail-in ballots could go uncounted if they arrived at election offices after the noon Tuesday deadline. The huge increase in mail-in ballots also has election officials warning it could take more than one day to tally them all, possibly delaying determination of some primary winners.
Lake County Democratic Party chairman James Wieser said his county received more than 25,000 absentee ballots and that officials began counting them at 8 a.m. Tuesday. He was unsure when the count would be completed.
WHAT’S AT STAKE
In 2016, the Republican and Democratic presidential races weren’t settled ahead of Indiana’s primary. That drama — and voter draw — was missing this year with Biden and Trump cruising to victory.
Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb and Democratic business executive Woody Myers are unopposed for their party’s gubernatorial nominations for the November election.
5TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
Spartz, a state senator from Noblesville, won the Republican nomination to replace GOP Rep. Susan Brooks in a district that Democrats are targeting for the fall election as its suburban Indianapolis areas have become less solidly Republican.
Spartz won Tuesday’s primary over 14 other candidates in the 5th Congressional District after flooding TV screens and mailboxes with ads fueled largely by $1 million she loaned to her campaign.
Hale, a former state representative from Indianapolis, won the Democratic primary and will face Spartz in the November election.
Spartz also benefited from nearly $500,000 spent by the Washington-based anti-tax Club for Growth on ads highlighting past criticisms of President Donald Trump by other candidates in a race that largely turned into a contest of Trump loyalty.
That enabled Spartz to build name identification as a first-time candidate after two years in the state Senate from being picked by party activists to complete a retired senator’s term.
Hale was the 2016 Democratic lieutenant governor nominee, and she has already raised more than $1 million. Hale’s closest challenger was Dee Thornton, the party’s 2018 candidate for the seat who was endorsed by the Congressional Black Caucus PAC.
1st CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
Visclosky’s choice to replace him after 36 years in Congress won the Democratic primary in northwestern Indiana’s 1st District.
Frank Mrvan, a Lake County township trustee whose father is a longtime state senator from Hammond, defeated 13 other candidates. Five-term Hammond Mayor Thomas McDermott entered the campaign as the most-prominent candidate, but Mrvan picked up endorsements from Visclosky and the United Steelworkers union.
Mrvan and McDermott far outpaced other hopefuls, including state Rep. Mara Candelaria Reardon of Munster and Valparaiso attorney Jim Harper, who was the 2018 Democratic candidate for secretary of state.
Mrvan will be a heavy favorite in the November election against Republican primary winner Mark Leyva, who has lost several times to Visclosky.