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Hillary Clinton's campaign is calling for a quick fix to the Nebraska Democratic Party's preparations. | Getty Clinton campaign moves to address Nebraska absentee ballot complaints

Hillary Clinton’s campaign is calling for a quick fix from the Nebraska Democratic party amid complaints from voters who still haven't received their absentee ballots ahead of a Tuesday deadline to submit their pick for president.

An untold number of Cornhuskers who can't make Saturday's caucus have been contacting state and local Democratic party officials, as well as the Clinton campaign and media to report the problem.

“I feel helpless,” Marilyn Humphrey, a 68-year old from Omaha, said in an interview. She said she had sent in two requests for an absentee preference card — the first time in early February — but was still waiting as of Tuesday to get the materials. The potential Clinton backer said she can’t make it to the Saturday caucus because she plans to be out of town and she also didn't have time to drive an hour to Lincoln to complete the document in person.

On its website, the Nebraska Democratic party says the absentee option "is no longer available" and urges people to personally attend their caucus. It also lists several thousand people whose absentee ballots have been received on time.

But not every Democrat in Nebraska is satisfied with the process. At a Monday campaign event in Lincoln featuring Chelsea Clinton, about five constituents approached state Sen. Adam Morfeld to report problems getting their absentee ballots in time. "That's an indication to me this is not an isolated problem," he said.

In a statement to POLITICO, Kane Miller, the Nebraska state director for the Clinton campaign, called on the Democratic party to "take steps to ensure Nebraskans can make their voices heard in this process.”

“No matter what candidate you support, as Democrats we should all agree that no eligible voter should be left out of the process when it is possible to include them and have their vote counted," he said.

Hadley Richters, the executive director of the Nebraska Democratic Party, said in an interview Tuesday that a "majority" of absentee ballot requests were responded to within 24 hours after they arrived in Lincoln. "The idea we didn't sent out ballots in a timely fashion is not the case," she said, explaining that there were "a variety of circumstances" for people who didn't get their absentee ballot. Some simply didn't meet the party's Feb. 24 deadline to request one. Others weren't registered as Democrats.

A spokesperson for the Bernie Sanders campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.