Election deniers who lost secretary of state races now run several state GOP operations

By |2023-02-26T20:30:56-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

Republican Kristina Karamo campaigns in Lansing, Michigan, on Aug. 27, 2022. Karamo, an activist who rose to prominence for her efforts to overturn Michigan’s 2020 presidential results, was recently elected chair of the Michigan GOP at the party’s convention. (Photo by Allison R. Donahue/Michigan Advance)Many of the election deniers who ran last year for positions that would have given them control over state elections systems lost their races. But several have found a new path to exert influence: as chair of their state Republican Party.Kristina Karamo, an activist who rose to prominence for her efforts to overturn Michigan’s 2020 presidential results, was elected chair of the Michigan GOP Feb. 18 at the party’s convention.A week earlier, Mike Brown, a former county commissioner who has stoked fears that the 2020 election was stolen, won the same job at Kansas’ convention.And in July, Idaho Republicans chose Dorothy Moon, a former state legislator who has said there was a “big problem” with the 2020 vote and made unfounded claims about illegal voting, as their leader.Meanwhile, Tina Peters announced last week that she’s running for state GOP chair in Colorado. A former county election clerk, Peters is facing felony charges in connection with an alleged scheme to breach secure voting equipment in order to show that her state’s 2020 vote was rigged.All four Republicans ran unsuccessfully last year for secretary of state, which would have made them their state’s chief election official. Karamo won the Republican nomination, then was defeated in the general election by Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat. Brown, Moon, and Peters all lost in the GOP primaries.Spokespeople for the Kansas and Idaho Republican parties said the chair position is unsalaried. The Michigan party did not immediately respond to an inquiry.A new platformThe emerging trend of election deniers running for secretary of state before going on to lead their state party gives deniers yet another platform from which to exert influence, by stoking unfounded fears about election systems and pushing for restrictive voting policies.Already, hundreds of deniers are in office across the country. A Brookings Institution study found that 226 out of 345 candidates who ran for congressional, state legislative, or statewide positions — 66% — won their races. And, as States Newsroom recently reported, at least five states have deniers running their election systems as secretary of state.“State party chairs have tremendous power in our two-party system: to appoint poll workers and poll watchers, to influence who makes it on the ballot,” said Norman Eisen, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, who co-authored the study of election-denier candidates. “They can direct funding and support to these individuals. They shape the national Republican Party platform and operation. State parties have a lot of power and that means state party chairs have a lot of power.”That could offer a valuable boost to former President Donald Trump in these states — though none of the three chairs has yet endorsed a GOP presidential candidate.The trend also highlights how, despite some high-profile defeats last year, denialism and extremism maintain a hold on many rank-and-file Republican activists and voters.Karamo has said the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection was a false-flag operation. “I believe this is completely Antifa posing as Trump supporters,” she said the following day, referring to left-wing anti-fascist activists.And she never conceded her 14-point loss to Benson in November. “Why would I concede to a fraudulent process?” she asked, according to the Detroit Free Press. In winning the party chair post, Karamo defeated another election denier, Matthew DePerno, who lost his race last year for attorney general.As a legislator, Moon worked to tighten Idaho’s voting rules, introducing a bill that would have banned the use of student IDs to vote, eliminated the use of affidavits for voters without proper ID, and ended same-day voter registration.Arguing for the measure, which ultimately did not pass, Moon spread stories about people crossing into Idaho from Canada to vote illegally. The secretary of state’s office said that wasn’t happening.Mike Brown, who lost a Republican primary for Kansas secretary of state in 2022, was elected chairman of the state party over Helen Van Etten by a vote of 90-88. (Photo by Tim Carpenter/Kansas Reflector)Campaigning last year for secretary of state, Brown raised unfounded fears about the security of Kansas’ elections and questioned the 2020 presidential results. After the incumbent secretary of state, Scott Schwab, said there were no major problems with the state’s voting, The Associated Press reported, Brown responded: “Because he said so? Or because he can prove it?”“His answer is, ‘There is nothing to see here, keep moving,’” Brown added. “You should start looking and you should stop moving.”Eisen warned that, despite the losses last year by several prominent election deniers, the ascension of deniers to state chair posts underscores the threat that the ideology continues to pose.“When you combine that with the fact that election deniers have taken control in other places, it represents a clear and present danger,” Eisen said. “We must celebrate the successes we had, but keep our guard up, remain at high alert, and redouble efforts to prevent this election denial philosophy from destroying American democracy.”The post Election deniers who lost secretary of state races now run several state GOP operations appeared first on Iowa Capital Dispatch.

Opinion: Fox News broadcast voting fraud allegations it knew was false – Asheville Citizen-Times

By |2023-02-26T20:30:58-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

I did an interview with Dan Rather in 2008 shortly after I resigned as chief prosecutor at Guantanamo. At the end of the interview, we went out on the street in Washington to shoot some footage of us walking together. As soon as we stepped outside, people recognized Mr. Rather. A group of foreign businessmen rushed up and asked if they could take a group photo with him. He said he would be happy to do it. He chatted with them for several minutes and shook each one’s hand before we returned to the task of filming our stroll. Most in his position would have ignored the passersby, but Mr. Rather seemed to genuinely enjoy the interaction.Dan Rather anchored the CBS Evening News for 24 years. He left the anchor chair in 2005 following a "60 Minutes" piece he did in 2004 on then presidential candidate George Bush’s service in the Texas Air National Guard. The story alleged that Bush received preferential treatment to get into the Guard and was a goof-off during the time he served. Almost immediately, some questioned the authenticity of the documents the story was based on. CBS appointed a panel led by Dick Thornburgh, who was attorney general under President George H.W. Bush, and Louis Boccardi, former president of the Associated Press, to look into the "60 Minutes" piece. The panel issued a 224-page report and found that those involved in the Bush story failed to properly authenticate and corroborate the documents. As a result, four producers and executives were fired, and Dan Rather’s contract was not renewed in 2006, ending his 44-year career at CBS.Back then, heads rolled, not because those at CBS deliberately broadcast information they knew was false, but because they broadcast information without taking adequate steps to ensure it was true. If that standard applied today, the Fox News headquarters in New York would be empty.Recent reporting on the $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit Dominion Voting Systems filed against Fox News shows that everyone from owner Rupert Murdoch to on-air talking heads Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity knew the “Big Lie” was a big lie. But the “Big Lie” was what viewers wanted, and Fox News obliged.Occasional Asheville resident Sidney Powell – who was served with a $1.3 billion lawsuit by Dominion at her home in Biltmore Forest in January 2021 – had a lead role in crafting the Big Lie, and she peddled it regularly on Fox News.  She claimed voting machine software flipped votes from Trump to Biden and was created in Venezuela at the direction of Hugo Chavez.  In a Nov. 18, 2020, message to fellow host Laura Ingraham, Tucker Carlson said, “Sidney Powell is lying by the way. Caught her. It’s insane.” Ingraham responded, “Sidney is a complete nut.” Ms. Powell admitted in a March 2021 court filing that her statements about Dominion’s voting machines were spurious, saying “no reasonable person would conclude that the statements were truly statements of fact.” Think about that for a moment. In essence, Powell is saying, “Well sure, I said it, but no sane human being would believe me.”The Fox News crew had the same opinion about Ms. Powell’s “Big Lie” partner, Rudy Giuliani. Rupert Murdoch called the voting fraud claims Powell and Giuliani concocted “really crazy stuff.” Sean Hannity wrote that Giuliani was “acting like an insane person,” and Ingraham responded saying Giuliani is “such an idiot.”When a Fox News journalist tweeted that there was no evidence any voting system lost or changed votes, Carlson texted Hannity, “Please get her fired. ... It’s measurably hurting the company. The stock price is down.”  Hannity elevated the matter to a Fox News executive who said the reporter “has serious nerve doing this” and noted that it could drive viewers away from Fox News and to Newsmax and OAN.Hannity wanted to stop the exodus of disgruntled viewers. “Respecting this audience whether we agree with it or not is critical,” he said. But there is nothing respectful about knowingly peddling lies and pretending they are true.  Respecting your audience means telling them the truth, even if some of them can’t handle the truth.Shortly after the 2020 election, Fox News adopted the motto “Standing Up for What’s Right” to promote its primetime programming. The internal communications show the motto was a joke. The only thing those at Fox News stood up for was fat profits and fat paychecks. What’s right didn’t matter.Dominion Voting Systems is seeking $1.6 billion for the damage it suffered because of the lies Fox News chose to broadcast. The damage Fox News has inflicted on America is incalculable.Moe Davis is a retired U.S. Air Force Colonel, attorney, educator, politician, former administrative law judge and former N.C. 11th Congressional candidate

Election deniers who lost secretary of state races now run several state GOP operations

By |2023-02-26T20:30:58-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

Many of the election deniers who ran last year for positions that would have given them control over state elections systems lost their races. But several have found a new path to exert influence: as chair of their state Republican Party. Kristina Karamo, an activist who rose to prominence for her efforts to overturn Michigan’s 2020 presidential results, was elected chair of the Michigan GOP Feb. 18 at the party’s convention. A week earlier, Mike Brown, a former county commissioner who has stoked fears that the 2020 election was stolen, won the same job at Kansas’ convention. And in July, Idaho Republicans chose Dorothy Moon, a former state legislator who has said there was a “big problem” with the 2020 vote and made unfounded claims about illegal voting, as their leader. Meanwhile, Tina Peters announced last week that she’s running for state GOP chair in Colorado. A former county election clerk, Peters is facing felony charges in connection with an alleged scheme to breach secure voting equipment in order to show that her state’s 2020 vote was rigged. All four Republicans ran unsuccessfully last year for secretary of state, which would have made them their state’s chief election official. Karamo won the Republican nomination, then was defeated in the general election by Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat. Brown, Moon, and Peters all lost in the GOP primaries. Spokespeople for the Kansas and Idaho Republican parties said the chair position is unsalaried. The Michigan party did not immediately respond to an inquiry. A new platform The emerging trend of election deniers running for secretary of state before going on to lead their state party gives deniers yet another platform from which to exert influence, by stoking unfounded fears about election systems and pushing for restrictive voting policies. Already, hundreds of deniers are in office across the country. A Brookings Institution study found that 226 out of 345 candidates who ran for congressional, state legislative, or statewide positions — 66% — won their races. And, as States Newsroom recently reported, at least five states have deniers running their election systems as secretary of state. “State party chairs have tremendous power in our two-party system: to appoint poll workers and poll watchers, to influence who makes it on the ballot,” said Norman Eisen, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, who co-authored the study of election-denier candidates. “They can direct funding and support to these individuals. They shape the national Republican Party platform and operation. State parties have a lot of power and that means state party chairs have a lot of power.” That could offer a valuable boost to former President Donald Trump in these states — though none of the three chairs has yet endorsed a GOP presidential candidate. The trend also highlights how, despite some high-profile defeats last year, denialism and extremism maintain a hold on many rank-and-file Republican activists and voters. Karamo has said the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection was a false-flag operation. “I believe this is completely Antifa posing as Trump supporters,” she said the following day, referring to left-wing anti-fascist activists. And she never conceded her 14-point loss to Benson in November. “Why would I concede to a fraudulent process?” she asked, according to the Detroit Free Press. In winning the party chair post, Karamo defeated another election denier, Matthew DePerno, who lost his race last year for attorney general. As a legislator, Moon worked to tighten Idaho’s voting rules, introducing a bill that would have banned the use of student IDs to vote, eliminated the use of affidavits for voters without proper ID, and ended same-day voter registration. Arguing for the measure, which ultimately did not pass, Moon spread stories about people crossing into Idaho from Canada to vote illegally. The secretary of state’s office said that wasn’t happening. Mike Brown, who lost a Republican primary for Kansas secretary of state in 2022, was elected chairman of the state party over Helen Van Etten by a vote of 90-88. (Photo by Tim Carpenter/Kansas Reflector) Campaigning last year for secretary of state, Brown raised unfounded fears about the security of Kansas’ elections and questioned the 2020 presidential results. After the incumbent secretary of state, Scott Schwab, said there were no major problems with the state’s voting, The Associated Press reported, Brown responded: “Because he said so? Or because he can prove it?” “His answer is, ‘There is nothing to see here, keep moving,’” Brown added. “You should start looking and you should stop moving.” Eisen warned that, despite the losses last year by several prominent election deniers, the ascension of deniers to state chair posts underscores the threat that the ideology continues to pose. “When you combine that with the fact that election deniers have taken control in other places, it represents a clear and present danger,” Eisen said. “We must celebrate the successes we had, but keep our guard up, remain at high alert, and redouble efforts to prevent this election denial philosophy from destroying American democracy.”

Letter: “Report: Ex-Arizona AG withheld evidence 2020 election was fair”

By |2023-02-26T20:31:00-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

Re: the Feb. 23 article "Report: Ex-AZ AG withheld evidence 2020 election was fair."How wrong that the former Attorney General knew the 2020 election was fair with no discernible fraud and then kept that secret. Wrong that public information was concealed and wrong that it purposely fueled thoughts and conspiracy theories he knew were unfounded.Those theories gave tax funded Ninjas who came in and hand counted ballots for months and increasing Joe Biden's Arizona win. Theories that allowed County Supervisors to justify not counting votes that actually supported their candidates' win in Cochise County. All of that based on false information and wrong theories known to be false. All of that allowed people to say there were "doubts" and "irregularities" when in fact there were none.We must move on. We must start by telling the truth. People are also reading… John YoakumDisclaimer: As submitted to the Arizona Daily Star. Follow these steps to easily submit a letter to the editor or guest opinion to the Arizona Daily Star. Arizona Daily Star View Comments #lee-rev-content { margin:0 -5px; } #lee-rev-content h3 { font-family: inherit!important; font-weight: 700!important; border-left: 8px solid var(--lee-blox-link-color); text-indent: 7px; font-size: 24px!important; line-height: 24px; } #lee-rev-content .rc-provider { font-family: inherit!important; } #lee-rev-content h4 { line-height: 24px!important; font-family: "serif-ds",Times,"Times New Roman",serif!important; margin-top: 10px!important; } @media (max-width: 991px) { #lee-rev-content h3 { font-size: 18px!important; line-height: 18px; } } #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article { clear: both; background-color: #fff; color: #222; background-position: bottom; background-repeat: no-repeat; padding: 15px 0 20px; margin-bottom: 40px; border-top: 4px solid rgba(0,0,0,.8); border-bottom: 1px solid rgba(0,0,0,.2); display: none; } #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article, #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article p { font-family: -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, "Segoe UI", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif, "Apple Color Emoji", "Segoe UI Emoji", "Segoe UI Symbol"; } #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article h2 { font-size: 24px; margin: 15px 0 5px 0; font-family: "serif-ds", Times, "Times New Roman", serif; } #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article .lead { margin-bottom: 5px; } #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article .email-desc { font-size: 16px; line-height: 20px; margin-bottom: 5px; opacity: 0.7; } #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article form { padding: 10px 30px 5px 30px; } #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article .disclaimer { opacity: 0.5; margin-bottom: 0; line-height: 100%; } #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article .disclaimer a { color: #222; text-decoration: underline; } #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article .email-hammer { border-bottom: 3px solid #222; opacity: .5; display: inline-block; padding: 0 10px 5px 10px; margin-bottom: -5px; font-size: 16px; } @media (max-width: 991px) { #pu-email-form-opinion-email-article form { padding: 10px 0 5px 0; } } Catch the latest in Opinion Get opinion pieces, letters and editorials sent directly to your inbox weekly!

2 contested races for Sharyland school board election | MyRGV.com

By |2023-02-26T20:31:06-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

Voters in Sharyland ISD will see two contested elections on their ballots in May. Two newcomers will vie for the place 1 seat on the board. Sergio Saenz, a self-employed Mission resident, will run against Meagan Sullivan, a Mission educational diagnostician. Longtime place 1 incumbent Ricky Longoria announced earlier this month that he would not seek reelection for his spot on the board. Voters will see a rematch in the race for Place 2. Incumbent Alejandro Rodrigurez, a criminal investigator from Mission, will seek to defend his seat against Julio Cerda, a Mission engineer. Rodriguez successfully ousted Cerda from the Place 2 spot in the 2020 election.

Failing at polls, election deniers focus on state GOP posts – NewsTimes

By |2023-02-26T20:31:10-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

PARKER, Colo (AP) — In a basement event space in the Denver suburb of Parker, Tina Peters surveyed a crowd of Colorado Republicans last week and made an unusual pitch for why she should become chair of their beleaguered party: “There's no way a jury of 12 people is going to put me in prison.”Peters was referring to her upcoming trial on seven felony charges related to her role in allegedly accessing confidential voting machine data while she was clerk in western Colorado's Mesa County. The incident made her a hero to election conspiracy theorists but unpopular with all but her party's hardest-core voters. Peters, who condemns the charges as politically motivated, finished second in last year's GOP primary for secretary of state, Colorado's top elections position.

Failing at polls, election deniers focus on state GOP posts – Orlando Sentinel

By |2023-02-26T20:31:12-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

In a basement event space in the Denver suburb of Parker, Tina Peters surveyed a crowd of Colorado Republicans last week and made an unusual pitch for why she should become chair of their beleaguered party: “There’s no way a jury of 12 people is going to put me in prison.”Peters was referring to her upcoming trial on seven felony charges related to her role in allegedly accessing confidential voting machine data while she was clerk in western Colorado’s Mesa County. The incident made her a hero to election conspiracy theorists but unpopular with all but her party’s hardest-core voters.AdvertisementPeters, who condemns the charges as politically motivated, finished second in last year’s GOP primary for secretary of state, Colorado’s top elections position.Now Peters has become part of a wave of election deniers who, unable to succeed at the polls, have targeted the one post — state party chair — that depends entirely on those hardest-core Republicans.AdvertisementEmbracing election conspiracy theories was a political albatross for Republicans in states that weren’t completely red last year, with deniers losing every statewide bid in the swing states of Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. But the movement has focused on GOP state party chairs — positions that usually are selected by only dedicated activists and have the power to influence the party’s presidential nominating contest and some aspects of election operations, such as recruiting poll watchers.“The rise of this dangerous ideology nationwide and the rise within party machinery are ominous,” said Norm Eisen, a prominent Washington lawyer and former ambassador who is executive chair of States United Democracy Center, which tracks election deniers. “It’s an outrageous phenomenon.”Kristina Karamo, a former community college instructor who lost her bid last fall to become Michigan’s secretary of state by 14 percentage points, won the chair of the Michigan Republican Party a week ago. She beat a fellow election denier, failed attorney general candidate Matthew DePerno.In Kansas, Mike Brown, a conspiracy theorist who lost his primary bid for secretary of state, was named chair of the state party.Peters is just one of multiple candidates for the Colorado position who have repeated former President Donald Trump’s lies that President Joe Biden did not legitimately win the 2020 election.“We can’t just say, ‘Oh, it’s time to get over 2020 and be done with that,’” said Aaron Wood, a self-described Christian conservative father also running for Colorado GOP chair, who organized a slate of candidates to take over the party’s top posts. “Until I have 100% confidence that the election has integrity, I will not be done with that.”The wave of election deniers follows a push by Trump during his administration to stock the roster of party chairs with loyalists, several of whom supported his attempt to overturn the 2020 election and remain in the White House. Of those, Kelli Ward, the chair of the Arizona GOP, did not run again and was replaced by another Trump loyalist, former state Treasurer Jeff DeWitt. In Georgia, chairman David Shafer has announced he won’t seek another term this June, amid scrutiny over whether he could be indicted for efforts to help Trump overturn the 2020 election.As in most states, the new Georgia party head will be selected by leaders of local county parties. Many of those are Trump loyalists who also backed Shafer’s bid to overturn Trump’s 2020 loss in the state. But Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who defied Trump’s request and easily beat a primary challenger last year backed by Shafer, has marginalized the state party, creating a parallel structure to raise money and turn out voters.AdvertisementThat’s an example of how the once powerful post of state party chair has changed.“It used to be adjacent to public service, to be the state party chair, and now it’s something where you get to dunk on Democrats on Twitter,” said Robert Jones, a Republican pollster in Idaho.In that state, Dorothy Moon, an election denier and former state representative who made an unsuccessful primary run for secretary of state, became the Idaho GOP chair last year.Still, Eisen noted that state parties have important roles in appointing poll workers and poll watchers in many states. A perennial fear has been that conspiracists could fill those positions and disrupt elections, though that did not happen in 2022 despite a prominent conservative effort to find more poll watchers.“Maybe the Karamos and the Browns and the Moons will implode,” Eisen said. “There is a kind of incompetence that goes with this ideology. But it’s a concerning trend given the power these state parties have.”Parties also have a major role in structuring their primaries. In Michigan, the party apparatus that Karamo now leads has the power to move its nominating contest to a closed convention, where activists select the winner.Advertisement“Donald Trump would love there to be a convention for Michigan’s delegates,” Jason Roe, the former executive director of the state party, said in an interview.Ironically, Trump had endorsed DePerno, a lawyer who unsuccessfully sued to force a new count in 2020. Instead, Karamo, whom the former president had supported in her secretary of state race, won. She has described abortion as “child sacrifice” and Democrats as having a “Satanic agenda.”Last wek, on the podcast of Trump adviser Steve Bannon last week, Karamo said Michigan was “ground zero for the globalist takeover of the United States of America.”In Colorado, many Republican strategists say they are prepared for Peters or another election denier to win the party chair position next month.“People seem almost resigned that the party is going to fall into the hands of this crowd for the next two years,” said Sage Naumann, one of the operatives, who said usually a chair’s impact on elections is “neutral,” but that could change.“If they’re constantly making controversial statements, then they can be detrimental,” Naumann said.AdvertisementThe insurgent candidates running for Colorado’s chair argue things can’t get worse for the GOP in the state. Republicans lost every statewide race by double digits in November and have their smallest share of seats in the Legislature in state history.The candidates for party chair claim the Colorado GOP has been too timid and needs to be more outspoken and conservative — a risky bid in a state that has been rapidly moving to the left. As part of that, they seek to restrict the primary to only registered Republicans, shutting out voters not affiliated with any party who have been eligible to participate. That would require overturning a voter-approved ballot measure, which activists failed to do in a lawsuit last year. They hope to have a better shot with the party chair’s support.At the debate last week in Parker, former state Rep. Dave Williams said: “It’s time we had a warlike leader who is going to go toe-to-toe” with Democrats.Williams later added: “Joe Biden is not a legitimate president.”Breaking NewsAs it happensBe the first to know with email alerts on important breaking stories from the Orlando Sentinel newsroom.Only one candidate, Erik Aadland, a military veteran who unsuccessfully ran for Congress last year, cautioned about the election denier rhetoric. He noted that Democrats effectively used a tape of him questioning the validity of the 2020 election against him in his race. In an interview, he said specifically that he worried about Peters’ candidacy.“It’s not healthy, the words we’re using, the rhetoric we’ve been using,” Aadland said. And, he added, “I don’t think it’d be healthy to have a chairwoman under seven indictments.”AdvertisementPeters, however, reveled in her national profile. She noted that she had just started a podcast that had 60,000 downloads on its first day and that she raised $250,000 to fund a recount in three days after the 2022 primary —a recount that confirmed her loss.During a separate debate Saturday, she demonstrated the appeal of her message to voters whose beliefs are increasingly unpopular in a liberal state.“It’s not your fault that we lost this election in 2022. It’s not my fault that we lost this election in 2022,” she told another crowd of Republican voters at a suburban pizzeria. “It’s because of the machines.”___This story has been corrected to reflect that Tina Peters finished second, not third, in last year’s Republican primary for Colorado secretary of state.

Biden visits Kyiv, GOP 2024 race takes shape: week in politics – USA Today

By |2023-02-26T20:31:17-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

This week saw the one-year-mark since Russia invaded Ukraine, with President Joe Biden making a surprise visit in Kyiv and later stopping in Warsaw to recognize the anniversary and reiterate U.S. support for Ukraine.The anniversary comes as Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the country would be pulling back from New START, a nuclear arms reduction treaty between the U.S. and Russia. The White House also announced that the U.S. will be imposing a sweeping set of new sanctions against Moscow.Back at home, the Republican field for the 2024 presidential race is slowly but surely heating up. Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley made the rounds in Iowa, a key early voting state, after a few campaign stops in New Hampshire. Her fellow South Carolinian, Republican Sen. Tim Scott, who is mulling a presidential bid of his own, also made a visit to the Hawkeye State.What happened this week in politics?Biden made a surprise visit to Kyiv, meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in his first visit to Ukraine since Russia launched its war.Democrats breathed a sigh of relief when Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., announced he will be running for reelection ahead of a tough 2024 Senate map for Democrats.In other election news, California Democratic Rep. Barbara Lee jumped in a soon-to-be fierce primary fight for retiring Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s seat.The foreperson of the Georgia grand jury investigating Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election went public in a series of media interviews, revealing provocative details about the now concluded investigation – and possibly undermining public confidence in the case.Facing GOP blowback for the disastrous toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, the White House fired back, blaming former President Donald Trump’s administration for rolling back Obama-era rail safety measures.Stay in the conversation on politics:Sign up for the OnPolitics newsletterBiden pledges continued support for UkraineBiden made a surprise visit to Kyiv ahead of a scheduled trip to Warsaw to commemorate the one-year-anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. It was his first trip to the war-torn country since Russia launched its war and there is little record of other U.S. presidents visiting an active war zone with no U.S. troop presence.The meeting between Biden and Zelenskyy was symbolic, with Ukraine intensely lobbying the U.S. and the west for additional military aid. While in Kyiv, Biden announced the U.S. would be providing an additional $500 million in weaponry for Ukraine.'We need to keep living':What life is like for Ukrainians a year into Russia's invasionIn Warsaw, Biden reiterated the west’s continued support for Ukraine as it fends off Russia. He also made clear the U.S.’s continued commitment to bolstering the NATO alliance, calling it “more unified than ever” in the face of Russian aggression on Tuesday.“(Putin) doubts whether NATO can remain unified,” Biden said. “ But there should be no doubt: Our support for Ukraine will not waver, NATO will not be divided, and we will not tire.”Haley continues the rounds as GOP 2024 race takes shapeThe 2024 field for the GOP nomination for president is slowly shaping up. Haley continued her campaign in the crucial early voting state of Iowa after a trip to New Hampshire, another key primary state.In Iowa, Haley made a direct appeal to GOP voters who might be considering Trump over her, telling them “we’ve got to look forward,” in Urbandale on Monday.Who can beat Trump?:Republicans want to dump Trump. Will they rally behind a 2024 alternative fast enough?“President Trump is my friend. I think he was the right president at the right time,” Haley said. “He came in. He broke the things that needed to be broken, and he fixed them. And I was proud to serve in his cabinet. But as dire of a situation as this is, as much as all the media and everybody wants to talk about the past, we need to leave the status quo in the past. We've got work to do. We've got to look forward.”Republican South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, who is reportedly considering a presidential campaign in 2024, also made a stop in Iowa on Wednesday, delivering remarks at an event at Drake University in Des Moines and also speaking at the Republican Party of Polk County Lincoln dinner.Tester announces reelection bid, Democrats breathe a sigh of reliefIn other 2024 news, Democratic Sen. Jon Tester delivered good news for national Democrats on Wednesday when he announced his reelection bid for Senate in his home state of Montana.Senate Democrats are looking at a tough map for 2024. Of the 34 seats up for reelection, Democrats will be defending 23 of them. Tester, a rare Democrat representing the deep-red red-leaning state of Montana, will be in the crosshairs of Republicans hoping to take the Senate.More elections:In historic first, Jennifer McClellan just won election to Congress. Black women say it's not enoughIn California, Democratic Rep. Barbara Lee announced she will be running to replace retiring Sen. Dianne Feinstein. Lee enters an intensely competitive primary with Democratic Reps. Katie Porter and Adam Schiff already in the mix.The seat, which lies in deep-blue California, is expected to remain in Democratic hands, meaning whoever comes out on top of the Democratic primary will likely win the general election as well.Georgia grand jury foreperson goes public on a media tourThe foreperson of the Georgia grand jury investigating Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election went public this week, making the rounds with multiple media interviews.Emily Kohrs gave provocative details about what is to come from the now concluded investigation, telling the New York Times that the grand jury recommended indictments against multiple people on various charges.“It’s not a short list,” Kohrs told the New York Times. While declining to give details on who specifically is in that list, Kohrs said “You’re not going to be shocked. It’s not rocket science.”While her public comments were highly unusual for any grand jury inquiry, legal experts told USA TODAY that her comments had no real legal implications but they could undermine public confidence in the process.Related:Georgia grand jury foreperson's unusual media tour likely heartburn for Trump inquiryButtigieg visits East Palestine after train derailment disasterTransportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg visited East Palestine, Ohio on Thursday  to assess damages after a toxic trail derailment that released hazardous chemicals into the town's ground, air and water.Republicans have been attacking the White House, specifically targeting Buttigieg over the derailment, arguing Buttigieg was too slow to respond to the disaster. Buttigieg acknowledged at a news conference that he regretted not coming sooner, saying he was attempting to balance his role as transportation secretary while also not overstepping on the National Transportation Safety Board’s investigation into the derailment.Related:In another train derailment, 31 Union Pacific cars carrying coal derail in NebraskaBut Buttigieg argued that Republicans were playing “political games” over the disaster, pushing back against GOP lawmakers who were in favor of scaling back government rail regulations.The White House also fired back at Republicans over the toxic train derailment in East Palestine Ohio, blaming the derailment on the Trump administration for rolling back Obama-era safety regulations that were implemented to avert such disasters.

Tabulator ban, closed primaries voted down as election bills pile up – Independent Record

By |2023-02-26T20:31:19-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

Sam Wilson Three controversial proposals backed by right-wing “election integrity” groups were summarily tabled by Montana lawmakers following committee hearings that stretched through Saturday.The bills, all sponsored by Sen. Theresa Manzella, R-Hamilton, would have banned machine-counting of ballots, required votes be counted at the county precincts they were cast in and moved Montana to closed primary elections.As a crucial legislative deadline nears, the bills to drastically change the way elections are conducted in Montana surfaced in the midst of a procedural bottleneck. The approaching transmittal deadline prompted the Senate State Administration Committee to hold an unusual Saturday meeting to consider them alongside a half-dozen other bills.The committee chair, Sen. Mike Cuffe, R-Eureka, acknowledged the time crunch, caused in part by a bill-drafting process that has stretched longer into the session than it typically does. People are also reading… “We worked hard to keep this committee on schedule as we were moving along,” Cuffe said at one point. “And all of a sudden, right at the end … we wound up with a number of last-second bills.”General policy bills must clear the chamber they originated in by March 3.Hand-counting ballotsThe committee heard about an hour of testimony on Senate Bill 435, which would have eliminated the use of tabulators in Montana, and would require all counties to hand-count every selection on every ballot. Arguments to return to hand-counting have gained popularity in right-wing circles across the country, with many who dispute the results of the 2020 presidential election suggesting the ballot-counting machines were hacked.But studies have repeatedly found that hand-counting produces less accurate results, and election experts note that partisan shenanigans, from outright fraud to mass disqualification of ballots, were far more prevalent in the days before machines came into play for the purpose of counting ballots.Manzella and people who testified in support of her bill referred to high-profile hacking incidents to suggest the machines are vulnerable, including the 2015 breach of the federal Office of Personnel Management and the 2020 cyber-attack conducted through Solar Winds software.“I’m concerned that we are not going to be able to stay in front of technology,” Manzella said. “As we move forward at this amazingly rapid rate of speed with which technology is coming online, we now have concerns about artificial intelligence injected into our elections." Sen. Theresa Manzella on SB 435. While some IT experts acknowledge the potential for security vulnerabilities in ballot-counting machines, they also argue that random-sample audits of the results are the best guarantee against manipulation. Montana requires audits for all federal elections that use tabulators to count votes.Several opponents also noted that state law already allows each county to determine whether it will use tabulators or hand-count ballots. Currently 10 of Montana’s less populated counties still hand-count their ballots, and counties can opt out of using tabulators if they choose.Proponents of eliminating tabulators have never identified an instance of the machines misidentifying a vote in an election, aside from mistakes that were due to human error. Despite two years of investigations around the country, no evidence has emerged of a ballot-counting machine being hacked during an election.Likewise, no evidence has emerged of votes being switched, nor has evidence emerged of any of the other suggestions of large-scale coordinated voter fraud.After fellow Republicans on the panel indicated they would not support the measure, Manzella made a motion to table the bill. The motion passed unanimously.Counting ballots at precinctsSenate Bill 433, also introduced by Manzella, would require ballots to be counted at the precinct where they were cast, prior to being transported to the county’s centralized location for counting ballots.Under current practice, election officials count the number of ballots at each precinct polling place — but not the intensive process of tallying up each vote on each ballot — before sealing them up and transporting them to the central location. Two election officials must accompany the ballots any time they’re moved, part of Montana’s “chain-of-custody” requirements.Manzella said her bill would expand that to require all of the votes on those ballots to be counted in the place they were cast.“If there was a count that could be documented and posted, then at least we would have something to refer back to, for the purpose of confirming that there was nothing nefarious that happened between when the ballots left the polling place and when they arrived at the central counting place,” Manzella told the committee.But county officials opposed the bill, saying existing security measures already ensure the ballots aren’t tampered with. And the proposal could be expensive, potentially requiring the purchase of new tabulators for every precinct in order to count up the ballots. The alternative would be to hand-count them, a time-intensive process more prone to inaccuracies.The bill would also require video and audio recording off all vote-counting activities. Those processes are already required to be open to the public, but “election integrity” groups in Montana have alleged foul play in the absence of recorded evidence to the contrary.“That is a huge ask of the counties,” said Regina Plettenberg, with the Montana Association of Clerk and Recorders. “... Installing, maintaining and affording this equipment would be very difficult.”The bill failed to pass on a 3-7 bipartisan vote.Closed primariesAnother bill offered by Manzella would have required Montanans to declare a party affiliation in order to vote in the state’s primary elections. That would be a switch from Montana’s current “open primary” system, in which voters don’t register with a party and are free to vote in a party primary of their choosing. Unaffiliated voters wouldn’t be able to vote in any primary races.Manzella framed her proposal in the parlance of the state’s top two college sports teams.“Should the Bobcats be able to choose the quarterback for the Grizzlies?” she asked.Ravalli County resident Alan Lackey testified in support of the bill, saying the current system doesn’t work.“That means the other side can affect and influence what happens in our party,” said Lackey, who lost a 2022 primary race for a legislative seat.Opponents argued that since the state foots the bill for primary elections, locking independent voters out of those primaries would amount to a denial of their voting rights.The last vote of the day, Manzella offered a motion to table her bill before any debate began in the committee. It was tabled unanimously.Cast vote recordsLawmakers also discussed a pair of measures that emerged from the Legislature’s special Joint Select Committee on Election Integrity. That committee, dominated by Republican lawmakers, was formed at the beginning of the session after right-wing legislators spent more than a year demanding the body investigate Montana’s election security.Senate Bill 481 would require each county that uses machine tabulators to count ballots to generate a “cast vote record,” essentially a digital summary of each ballot scanned by the tabulator.Cast vote records were central to a wave of public-record requests submitted to election officials in Montana last summer. Across the country, the requests appeared to spike after Mike Lindell, a nationally prominent election conspiracy theorist, instructed his followers to request the records from the local election administrators.Clerk and recorders across Montana were subsequently barraged with duplicative requests, despite few, if any, counties in the state having the ability to generate those reports.Sen. Carl Glimm, R-Kila, chairs the special election committee and sponsored the bill. He said in order to get bipartisan support to advance the bill to a regular committee, he opted to make cast vote records non-public. Like official ballots, they would be retained by the county but could only be accessed by obtaining a judge’s order.Several proponents testified in support of the bill, but suggested the reports should be readily accessible to the public.Eric Bryson, speaking on behalf of the Montana Association of Counties, opposed the legislation on the grounds that it would require hundreds of thousands of dollars in technology expenses to comply. The software needed to generate those reports would incur a $5,000 per year cost to each county using tabulators, Bryson said. And at least 17 counties that use tabulators but don’t already have “hardened laptops” with special security protocols would need to pay about $10,000 apiece for those, he added, urging the committee to appropriate money to cover the costs.“If you’re going to improve processes or redefine the way we’re doing elections in Montana from the state, pay for it,” Bryson said.The proposal was endorsed by Missoula County, despite the added cost.“If adding this requirement, however, increases the confidence in our election process, then we’re pleased to support,” Jennifer Hensley, a lobbyist representing the county, told the committee.Hash validation testsSenate Bill 482 would require counties to run a “hash validation test” during their post-election audits. A hash is a code generated by an algorithm, and can be used to check whether the source code of a tabulator or other election system has been altered.The bill would require counties with election systems capable of generating the hash to check it against the “trusted hash” generated by the Election Assistance Commission when the system was initially certified for use. If no tampering has occurred, the hashes should be identical.Glimm said it was an example of best practices recommended by Election Systems & Software, the sole company that manufacturers tabulators used in Montana.Bryson said his organization doesn’t object to the process, but again opposes the bill for cost reasons. The hash test would require two high-security laptops to perform, he said, so each county that already has one would need to purchase another, and the others would have to buy two. He estimated counties would need another 66 of the laptops, at a cost of $10,000 apiece.Committee votes on SB 482 and SB 481 were pushed back to the following week. 0 Comments #lee-rev-content { margin:0 -5px; } #lee-rev-content h3 { font-family: inherit!important; font-weight: 700!important; border-left: 8px solid var(--lee-blox-link-color); text-indent: 7px; font-size: 24px!important; line-height: 24px; } #lee-rev-content .rc-provider { font-family: inherit!important; } #lee-rev-content h4 { line-height: 24px!important; font-family: "serif-ds",Times,"Times New Roman",serif!important; margin-top: 10px!important; } @media (max-width: 991px) { #lee-rev-content h3 { font-size: 18px!important; line-height: 18px; } } #pu-email-form-politics-email-article { clear: both; background-color: #fff; color: #222; background-position: bottom; background-repeat: no-repeat; padding: 15px 0 20px; margin-bottom: 40px; border-top: 4px solid rgba(0,0,0,.8); border-bottom: 1px solid rgba(0,0,0,.2); display: none; } #pu-email-form-politics-email-article, #pu-email-form-politics-email-article p { font-family: -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, "Segoe UI", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif, "Apple Color Emoji", "Segoe UI Emoji", "Segoe UI Symbol"; } #pu-email-form-politics-email-article h2 { font-size: 24px; margin: 15px 0 5px 0; font-family: "serif-ds", Times, "Times New Roman", serif; } #pu-email-form-politics-email-article .lead { margin-bottom: 5px; } #pu-email-form-politics-email-article .email-desc { font-size: 16px; line-height: 20px; margin-bottom: 5px; opacity: 0.7; } #pu-email-form-politics-email-article form { padding: 10px 30px 5px 30px; } #pu-email-form-politics-email-article .disclaimer { opacity: 0.5; margin-bottom: 0; line-height: 100%; } #pu-email-form-politics-email-article .disclaimer a { color: #222; text-decoration: underline; } #pu-email-form-politics-email-article .email-hammer { border-bottom: 3px solid #222; opacity: .5; display: inline-block; padding: 0 10px 5px 10px; margin-bottom: -5px; font-size: 16px; } @media (max-width: 991px) { #pu-email-form-politics-email-article form { padding: 10px 0 5px 0; } } Get Government & Politics updates in your inbox! 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Election code update passes Senate | NM Political Report

By |2023-02-26T03:25:34-05:00February 26th, 2023|Election 2020|

The state Senate approved a bill seeking to update the state election code on a 23-13, party-line vote.SB 180 seeks to update the state’s Election Code including, but not limited to, specifying when the Inspection of Public Records Act, or IPRA, can be used in election-based disclosures, allowing electronic nominating petition signatures, creating an election security program, requiring training for election challengers and watchers, revising requirements for the impoundment of ballots, audits, voting machine rechecks and recounts, revising election-related crimes and authorizing taxpayer information to be revealed to the secretary of state for purposes of maintaining voter registration records.“This is a bill that should look very familiar to this body because we’ve seen it for three years now,” Duhigg said. “SB180 is simply a pared down version of last year’s rendition, which was SB 6, which passed this body unanimously… But all of the changes that are in this bill, are borne from actual experiences that our election administrators have been navigating. Many of them have already been bug tested.”Many of the bill’s provisions were activated on a temporary basis during the 2020 election due to the COVID-19 public health crisis.“The changes that are in SB 180 are really needs not wants,”  Duhigg said. “These are technical, nonpartisan changes to our election code that provide needed clarity for our election administrator so that they can efficiently and uniformly administer our publicly funded elections here in New Mexico.”Sen. Cliff Pirtle, R-Roswell, submitted an amendment that sought to add verbiage to the line: “The county clerk shall only accept applications for a mailed ballot made through the official web portal operated by the secretary of state or submitted on the official form” that the form came from the county clerk’s office.Pirtle’s amendment failed on a 13-23 vote.Another amendment was submitted by Sen. William Sharer, R-Farmington, that would have required photo identification for votes.The amendment failed on the same 13-23 vote.One of the votes against SB 180 was Sen. Mark Moores, R-Albuquerque, who stated his disillusionment that the bill was not done this year in the spirit of bipartisanship that it was last year.“Last year we had a bipartisan bill. We worked in good faith because our republic needed (it)…. There’s been a trying couple years and I made a personal commitment to the Secretary of State and the sponsor of legislation last year that I wanted to work together on election bill because our republic needed that, and I took a lot of heat from my party and a lot of the advocates on our side of the aisle for working with your party, for coming to a bill that I thought was a pretty good bill,” Moores said.Moores said that he said he “made a commitment” to the Secretary of State to support the bill this year.However, because of the two amendments, which he described as minor changes, not passing, Moores said he could not support the bill.The bill was approved with amendments in the Senate Rules Committee on a party line 7-3 vote while it was approved unanimously by the Senate Judiciary Committee.Amendments from SRC included adding a section allowing the Secretary of State to adopt rules allowing public officials to make their home addresses confidential in election and financial disclosures, remove language in the proposed bill that requires election board members to be registered to vote, require replacement ballots be mailed no less than seven days before election day unless the voter’s address is confidential, allows the SOS to adopt rules when two or more candidates running for the same office in the same election have names that are so similar that it could cause confusion and, for local elections, require candidacy declarations have a nominating petition with the legally required number of signatures for the specific office.

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