Video recordings of Republican Party operatives meeting with grassroots activists provide an inside look at a multi-pronged strategy to target and potentially overturn votes in Democratic precincts: Install trained recruits as regular poll workers and put them in direct contact with party attorneys. The plan, as outlined by a Republican National Committee staffer in Michigan, includes utilizing rules designed to provide political balance among poll workers to install party-trained volunteers prepared to challenge voters at Democratic-majority polling places, developing a website to connect those workers to local lawyers and establishing a network of party-friendly district attorneys who could intervene to block vote counts at certain precincts. “Being a poll worker, you just have so many more rights and things you can do to stop something than [as] a poll challenger,” said Matthew Seifried, the RNC’s election integrity director for Michigan, stressing the importance of obtaining official designations as poll workers in a meeting with GOP activists in Wayne County last Nov. 6. It is one of a series of recordings of GOP meetings between summer of 2021 and May of this year obtained by POLITICO. Backing up those front-line workers, “it’s going to be an army,” Seifried promised at an Oct. 5 training session. “We’re going to have more lawyers than we’ve ever recruited, because let’s be honest, that’s where it’s going to be fought, right?”
Tennessee: Shelby County Commissioners, past, present and future, voice opposition to voting machine plan | Katherine Burgess/Memphis Commercial Appeal
Former, current and future Shelby County Commissioners gathered Friday to voice their opposition to a plan to approve the purchase of new voting machines for Shelby County, an idea poised to be voted on by the current county commission Monday. The Election Commission has said they would allow for voters to choose between voting on a machine that would then print out a ballot or voting with a pencil on a paper Scantron machine after the county spends $5.8 million on new machines from vendor Election Systems & Software, LLC, known as ES&S. If the resolution is approved, the equipment would be fully operational by the August general election, according to the Election Commission. But the group gathered Friday expressed concern that this would only result in hand-marked paper ballots being used by voters who knew to ask for them, meaning the majority of voters would still use ballot marking devices, something that has long been opposed by the Shelby County Commission. “Election security experts overwhelmingly are of the opinion that (hand-marked paper ballots) are the most secure system,” said Steve Mulroy, a former county commissioner who is currently running for Shelby County District Attorney. “For reasons which boggle the mind, the Election Commission has been insisting for years on a much pricier, more hackable ballot marking device.”
Full Article: Group urges opposition to voting machine purchase