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"Historically, you've seen about 1 percent of ballots get bounced for one reason or another, mostly because of lateness," said Nate Persily, a Stanford University professor of law and an expert on election administration. "But people are more attuned to the deadline this year, and voters are more aware of the criteria for casting absentee ballots".
So "lateness," easily correctable, quite reasonably was the reason for the turnaround in some states that showed a reversal of rejection rates from a growing number to a lessening one. Keep in mind the "mostly:" this article explains what else was responsible.
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Topic - Mail-in vote rejection rates, explained: - tinear 13:14:39 05/28/21 (0)