Fri Sep 11, 2020 AT 11:13 AM EDT
Attorney General William Barr blasted mail-in voting Thursday in Arizona, a state where about 80 percent of voters receive ballots in the mail.
Barr suggested mail-in ballots, used in much of the western U.S., are more vulnerable to intimidation and coercion than in-person voting, The Associated Press reported.
“The government and the people involved can find out and know how you voted. And it opens up the door to coercion,” Barr said. Read Full Story