>>513386074
>>513386650
States which have *Mandatory Mail* voting are different (from what occurred in 2020)
All states have some form of *absentee ballot* voting, but that is supposed to be restricted only to those that are out of the country itself or extremely far away at time of election, and absentee ballots also require advance application submittal by the voter. (This is what most of the thirty states which sent out fraudulent mass mail ballots did, was come up with a 'modified' absentee ballot "for everyone" kind of like "Medicare for All" conceptually)
Voting procedures can only be modified by vote of a state's Legislature. None of the thirty states using mass mail ballots in 2020, did that: It was by fiat decision "muh emergenceeee" (<-which was bullshit ten ways from Sunday), therefore everyone "needs a mass mail ballot"
Only nine states have Mandatory Mail voting, which means that it is the *ONLY* way you vote in an election: no ballot kiosks or anything else, just drop boxes at the. Mandatory Mail states have a *barcoded Ballot* that every state voter receives 6 weeks to a month prior to the election. This is based on your Registration to Vote in that state.
Fun Fact: as of the beginning of year 2020 only five states WA, OR, UT, HI, CO had approved mandatory mail ballots by their state Legislature. CA and NV only began it in 2020, and Vermont in 2021 (<--from a measure their Legislature passed in 1991)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postal_voting_in_the_United_States
The thirty states which used fraudulent mass mail ballots in 2020, additionally that year had a 'smorgasborg' of vote-how-you-want types of voting by booth, kiosk and other methods. This introduces yet another security breach risk, not present in Mandatory Mail which is solely by postal mail ballot (yes there is insecurity from the mail envelope but that is it).
There's no federal law boilerplate solution to this, when each state gets to make up its own rules.