Postmaster general rejects Trump claims about ability to handle mail-in ballots

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(WASHINGTON) -- Postmaster General Louis DeJoy on Thursday said former President Donald Trump and others are "wrong" to question the Postal Service's ability to deliver ballots ahead of the presidential election.

Asked by a reporter, at a virtual preview of the 2024 election, to respond specifically to Trump's claim that the Postal Service might deliberately misplace mail-in ballots, DeJoy responded tersely: "My response is like my response to everyone who says that we're not prepared for the election -- it's that they're wrong," he said. "I don't know that I need to comment any more than that. They're wrong."

At the top of his prepared remarks, DeJoy pushed back on those engaging in rhetoric that undermines the public confidence in the Postal Service, which, DeJoy reminded reporters, had been delivering ballots since 1864.

"We recognize that election officials are under an extreme amount of pressure, and will remain so for at least the next two months," he said. "We also recognize that the American public will become increasingly alarmed if there is ongoing dialogue that continues to question the reliability of the Postal Service for the upcoming elections."

"Let me be clear," DeJoy continued. "The Postal Service is ready to deliver the nation's mail in ballots."

DeJoy said the Postal Service delivered 99.89% of ballots from voters to election officials in the 2020 election, which he called a "highly sensitive, sensationalized environment."

In an interview with right-wing outlet Real America's Voice from Las Vegas last week, former President Donald Trump escalated false and baseless claims about mail-in voting, even suggesting a possible lawsuit.

"I read the post office is saying how bad it is. The post office is critiquing themselves, saying we're really in bad shape. We can't deliver the mail. And they're not even talking about mail in ballots, right? We're going to dump millions and millions of dollars," Trump said, repeating false claims that the last election was "rigged" and that the U.S. voting system is "bad."

ABC News' Soorin Kim contributed to this report.

Friday, September 20, 2024 at 9:02AM by Lucien Bruggeman, ABC News Permalink