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		Trump's appeal for poll monitors draws 
		tepid response from some supporters 
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		 [October 19, 2016] 
		By Ginger Gibson 
 SHERMANS DALE, Penn. (Reuters) - While 
		Donald Trump often rails against a “rigged” election on Twitter and at 
		rallies nationwide, he goes a few steps further in Pennsylvania, a state 
		crucial to the Republican’s fading chances to win the White House.
 
 Here, he has made direct appeals since August to recruit voters as poll 
		monitors on Election Day and has pointed specifically at Philadelphia as 
		a city beset by voter fraud.
 
 Despite offering little evidence for any of his claims, his “rigged” 
		election message is resonating with his followers in this traditional 
		battleground state where Democratic rival Hillary Clinton has opened up 
		a wide lead. But his calls for poll watchers on Nov. 8 is drawing a mix 
		of confusion, concern and tepid support.
 
 In some cases, Trump’s talk of fraud appears to have made some of his 
		own followers more resigned to an election loss, even though independent 
		studies show U.S. voting chicanery is exceptionally rare and certainly 
		never on a national scale.
 
 Since Aug. 8, when Trump first urged supporters in the state to “watch 
		other polling places and make sure that it’s 100-percent fine,” civil 
		rights groups have expressed fears that some supporters will take the 
		idea too far by forming roaming, vigilante-style crowds intimidating 
		voters.
 
 Trump supporter Mark Bowman, 53, says he isn’t the type to attend a 
		political rally or put campaign stickers on his car. And he isn’t 
		confident the election results will be correct.
 
		
		 
		“I hate to say it, but I don’t have a lot of faith,” Bowman said. “Voter 
		fraud is rampant especially in the cities.”
 But, in a comment echoed by nearly two dozen Trump supporters in the 
		state’s reliably Republican central regions, he said he thinks nothing 
		can be done to stop it and that becoming an amateur poll watcher is a 
		step too far.
 
 “What authority do I have to confront someone?” said the resident of 
		Shermans Dale, a rural community of about 5,000 people. “Your average 
		citizen, you’re going to end up in a confrontation with someone. You’re 
		going to end up in a bad situation.”
 
 There are official channels to monitor elections. Pennsylvania has a 
		system that allows campaigns and political parties to designate official 
		poll monitors, who are allowed into the polling places and can register 
		official complaints if they think someone isn’t a valid voter.
 
 A form on the Trump campaign’s website asks voters to help Trump “stop 
		crooked Hillary from rigging this election” by becoming a volunteer 
		Trump election observer.
 
 But in an example of the Trump campaign’s near non-existent effort to 
		organize field operations in key swing states, there is little evidence 
		that the recruitment drive is translating into legions of officially 
		sanctioned volunteers. Repeated inquiries from Reuters about efforts to 
		staff polling places went unanswered by his campaign.
 
 The rules allow each candidate and the state parties to name monitors. 
		With federal and local candidates both on the November ballot, there 
		could be dozens of watchers in a single precinct. But those familiar 
		with past elections say rarely does that happen. Instead, campaigns tend 
		to focus on only the most fought over swing districts.
 
 Steve Reigh, 57, a realtor from Elliottsburg, Pennsylvania, agrees with 
		Trump that the election is likely to be rigged, but says he also 
		resigned to the outcome of the election, win or lose.
 
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			Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump holds a campaign rally 
			in Green Bay, Wisconsin, U.S. October 17, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan 
			Ernst 
            
			 
			  
			“What are you going to do?” he said.
 ‘REALLY CLOSE VETTING’
 
 Some Trump supporters are branching out on their own.
 
 Jack Posobiec, a navy veteran and special projects director at 
			Citizens for Trump, a grassroots support group, says he hopes to 
			mobilize 3,000 volunteers in several key swing states in the final 
			days of the campaign, including busing supporters from Texas to 
			Ohio.
 
 On Oct. 1, Trump told a largely white rally of supporters in Manheim 
			in central Pennsylvania that they should go to neighborhoods other 
			than their own on election day and “watch”.
 
 “You've got to get everybody you know and you got to watch your 
			polling booths, because I hear too many stories about Pennsylvania, 
			certain areas," Trump said. "So go and vote and then go and check 
			out areas because a lot of bad things happen and we don’t want to 
			lose for that reason.”
 
 Dale Ho, a voting rights lawyer at the American Civil Liberties 
			Union, said on Twitter that Trump’s calls for "poll watchers" were a 
			“recipe for intimidation and discrimination."
 
 The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment.
 
 Married Trump supporters Gina, 75, and Larry Snyder, 77, of Newport 
			agree the election could be rigged but doubt anything can be done 
			about it, including poll-watching.
 
 Candace Lowe, 40, of Elliottsburg, Pennsylvania, said she is 
			resigned to a Trump loss because the government “can fudge stuff.” 
			Turning out en-masse to watch polling centers on election night 
			won’t change that, she said.
 
 
			
			 
			In Mechanicsburg, an overwhelmingly Republican borough of nearly 
			9,000 people, realtor Steve Johansen helped to set up a Trump field 
			office in a skating rink, but he has no plans to monitor any polling 
			places.
 
 “I have faith in the system,” he said.
 
 (Additional reporting David Ingram. Editing by Jason Szep and Ross 
			Colvin)
 
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