Cellphones in hand, 'Army for Trump' readies poll watching operation
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[October 07, 2020]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Joseph Tanfani
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - Republicans are
mobilizing thousands of volunteers to watch early voting sites and
ballot drop boxes leading up to November's election, part of an effort
to find evidence to back up President Donald Trump’s unsubstantiated
complaints about widespread voter fraud.
Across key battleground states such as Pennsylvania, Florida and
Wisconsin, Republican poll watchers will be searching for
irregularities, especially with regard to mail-in ballots whose use is
surging amid the coronavirus pandemic, according to more than 20
officials involved in the effort. They declined to say how many
volunteers have signed up so far; the campaign earlier this year said
its goal was to recruit 50,000 monitors nationwide.
The mission, the officials said, is to capture photos and videos
Republicans can use to support so-far unfounded claims that mail voting
is riddled with chicanery, and to help their case if legal disputes
erupt over the results of the Nov. 3 contest between Republican
incumbent Trump and his Democratic opponent Joe Biden.
The campaign is already posting material of activity it claims is
suspicious, including video of a Trump campaign observer being turned
away from an early voting site in Philadelphia last month. The city says
monitors are welcome in polling stations on Election Day but are not
permitted in early voting facilities.
Some voting-rights activists are concerned such encounters could
escalate in a tense year that has seen armed militias face off against
protestors in the nation's streets.
Poll watching by partisan observers is a normal feature in U.S.
elections that dates back to the 18th century and is subject to various
state laws and local rules.
Still, this year's operation by the Trump campaign is highly unusual,
voting rights advocates say, both in its focus on early voting and in
its emphasis on finding evidence to support baseless assertions by the
president and his supporters that Democrats plan to flood the system
with phony mail ballots to steal the election.
In a recruitment video posted on Twitter in September seeking volunteers
for this “Army for Trump," the president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., made
the unfounded claim that Democrats plan to “add millions of fraudulent
ballots” to rig the results. Trump repeatedly has refused to commit to
accepting the outcome of November's election. During the Sept. 29
presidential debate, he exhorted his supporters to “go into the polls
and watch very carefully.”
Mail ballot requests are tilting heavily to Democrats in battleground
states, which likely means Biden will be in the lead before in-person
voting begins on Election Day.
In Florida, where Republicans have historically relied on mail ballots,
nearly 2.5 million Democrats have requested them, compared with about
1.7 million Republicans. In Pennsylvania, more than 1.5 million
Democrats have requested a mail-in ballot, nearly triple the requests
from Republicans.
Republicans said they plan to monitor every step of mail voting,
including setting up cameras to show people dropping off multiple
ballots at drop boxes. Some states permit third-parties to drop off
ballots, but the practice is banned in others, including Pennsylvania.
Pat Dion, head of the Republican Party in Pennsylvania's Bucks County, a
politically divided suburb near Philadelphia, predicted the process
could get messy.
“There's going to be lots of watchers, lots of cameras and lots of
attorneys all across the country. It’s going to be chaotic," said Dion,
who said he nevertheless supports the effort.
Democrats and voting-rights advocates say Trump is trying to suppress
the vote, not protect it.
"It’s an attempt to scare eligible Americans into thinking they are in
danger if they go to vote,” said Myrna Perez, voting rights and
elections director for the Brennan Center, a nonpartisan voting rights
group.
Democrats say Trump's team is also laying the groundwork for a challenge
to mail ballots in the event he loses, possibly throwing the election to
Congress or the courts to decide the outcome.
Trump campaign spokeswoman Thea McDonald said in a statement that
"President Trump’s volunteer poll watchers will be trained to ensure all
rules are applied equally. And if fouls are called, the Trump Campaign
will go to court to enforce the laws."
'MAKE OUR REPUBLICAN PRESENCE KNOWN'
This is the first presidential election in nearly four decades that the
Republican National Committee has been free to sponsor such “ballot
security” operations without permission from a federal court. A 1982
consent decree restricted these activities after the party sent teams of
gun-toting men to minority neighborhoods during a New Jersey election
wearing uniforms saying “Ballot Security Task Force."
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Maryland election judge Cassandra Campbell places ballots from
voters in their cars into a curbside ballot drop box to prevent the
spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) during the Maryland U.S.
presidential primary election as other voters stand in a long line
waiting to cast their votes in College Park, Maryland, U.S., June 2,
2020. REUTERS/Jim Bourg/File Photo
That consent decree expired in 2018 and a federal judge declined
Democratic attempts to renew it.
In Wisconsin, a state Trump won by less than a percentage point in
2016, volunteers will be posted in heavily Democratic counties
around Milwaukee, Republican state party chairman Andrew Hitt told
Reuters.
Pennsylvania, too, is shaping up to be a hotbed of activity. Trump
won it by just over 44,000 votes in 2016. He has almost no path to
securing a second term if he doesn't win its 20 Electoral College
votes again in November.
In Montgomery County, a formerly Republican bastion outside
Philadelphia that is now reliably Democratic, the Republican Party
is holding several virtual training sessions over the next two weeks
for some 50 volunteers to monitor 11 proposed ballot drop boxes
there, according to an email sent by the party to supporters and
seen by Reuters. “It is critical that we make our Republican
presence known, so voters know they cannot get away with fraud,” the
email reads.
On the western side of the state near Pittsburgh, Trump supporter
Bob Howard has volunteered to watch election offices where voters
will be dropping off absentee ballots.
"We...need to make sure that all the rules are being followed, so
people can trust the results," the 70-year-old retiree said.
Democrats, meanwhile, are launching their own voter-protection
efforts. But theirs is a more traditional approach that includes
registered poll watchers and an army of attorneys.
In Pennsylvania, Biden's campaign said it has launched the biggest
such Democratic program there in history, with more than a thousand
lawyers and volunteers. It would not provide details on whether its
monitors will be deployed at drop boxes and other early voting
locations alongside their Republican rivals.
LAWSUITS MULTIPLYING
Election experts said the explosion of mail balloting is testing
voting laws designed around in-person balloting. There is no rule
book for monitors that try to enter early polling sites or challenge
voters trying to drop off their ballots, said Terry Madonna, a
political science professor at Franklin & Marshall college in
Pennsylvania.
“It all comes down to county election officials, and what they agree
can happen. All of this seems headed to a major court battle,”
Madonna said.
Confrontations have already emerged in Philadelphia, home to about
20% of Pennsylvania's registered Democrats.
Election administrators there defended their decision to turn away
the Trump campaign operative who filmed himself attempting to enter
an early voting site on Sept. 29.
"To be clear: the satellite offices are not polling places and the
Pennsylvania Election Code does not create a right for campaign
representatives to 'watch' at these locations," Andrew Richman,
chief of staff to the city solicitor, said in a statement.
The Trump campaign quickly filed a lawsuit seeking access for poll
observers in early voting sites. That suit is pending.
In Northampton County in northeastern Pennsylvania, meanwhile, the
Republican Party tried to get sheriff’s officers assigned to drop
boxes to request identification from voters dropping off ballots,
according to Frank DeVito, a Republican member of the Board of
Elections.
Pennsylvania law does not require voters to show an ID to vote. The
Democratic-controlled board of elections denied that request.
Undeterred, DeVito said volunteers will be watching those boxes
closely.
“We are telling them to take a folding chair, take video, take
photos," he said.
(Jarrett Renshaw reported from Pennsylvania and Joe Tanfani reported
from New Jersey. Editing by Soyoung Kim and Marla Dickerson)
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