http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/33538110/ns ... _politics/WASHINGTON - Even death can't stop some voters.
Thanks to the increasing popularity of absentee voting, a rising number of the recently deceased are casting ballots — legally.
The trick is to pull the lever before you kick the bucket.
States such as California, Texas and Florida intentionally count ballots sent in by voters who then died before Election Day, while states such as Colorado, Washington and South Dakota have no reliable method for discarding the votes of the deceased.
In the old days, voting by the dead was reserved for big-city political machines looking to stuff the ballot box illegally.
But the new kind of dead voting is a side effect of the popularity of absentee ballots.
In 32 states, any registered voter can mail in a ballot instead of going to a voting booth on Election Day, according to the Early Voting Information Center. And in 14 other states, they can do so as long as they have a good reason.
We will accept a mail/absentee ballot in MT from a dead person.


