Ronald Stroman, who stepped down earlier this year as the second in command at the U.S. Postal Service, warned that recent changes at the agency, now led by a Trump ally, could “disenfranchise” voters as they are implemented just months ahead of an election in which a record number of Americans are expected to vote by mail, The Guardian reports.
Said Stroman: “If you can’t right the ship, if you can’t correct these fast enough, the consequence is not just, OK, people don’t get their mail, it’s that you disenfranchise people.”
He added: “Making these changes this close to an election is a high-risk proposition.”
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