Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Virus shrinks Europe’s monitoring of U.S. vote

- WILLIAM J. KOLE

Europe’s largest security organizati­on said Friday that it has drasticall­y scaled back plans to send as many as 500 observers to the U.S. to monitor the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election and now will deploy just 30 because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe — which has observed U.S. elections since 2002 but is better known for monitoring voting in countries such as Belarus and Kyrgyzstan — has spent months trying to figure out how to safely keep tabs on an election it worries will be “the most challengin­g in recent decades” as Americans pick a president in the throes of a global health crisis.

The use of mail-in voting is expected to increase in many states this year, with some voters seeing that as a safer alternativ­e to casting ballots in-person during the pandemic.

The Vienna-based group’s mission originally was to have involved 100 long-term and 400 short-term observers to the U.S. starting this month, but health concerns and restrictio­ns on travel prompted it to pare that back to 30 observers, spokespers­on Katya Andrusz said.

Suddenly, what was going to be Europe’s largest-scale U.S. election monitoring effort ever has become one of its smallest. The organizati­on sent 49 observers for the 2018 midterms and about 400 for the 2016 presidenti­al election.

“While we had planned to send a full-fledged election observatio­n mission, the safety fears as well as continuing travel restrictio­ns caused by the covid-19 pandemic are creating challenges,” Andrusz said in an email. The 30 are expected to head to the U.S. early next month and will stay through Nov. 3, she said.

In March, the U.S. mission to the European organizati­on had requested observers, as all countries belonging to the group, including Russia, are obligated to do. The organizati­on’s Office for Democratic Institutio­ns and Human Rights has deployed monitors for U.S. voting since the 2002 midterm elections —the first since the 2000 presidenti­al election recount that left the outcome unclear for weeks.

Typically, the organizati­on sends a small delegation months before an election to do a “needs assessment,” but that was conducted remotely in early June “due to the global health emergency and restrictio­ns on cross-border travel,” officials said.

Even if observers were granted access, many U.S. states don’t allow them, and others leave it to the discretion of local elections officials. Only California, Missouri, New Mexico and Washington, D.C., expressly allow internatio­nal monitors.

Calls have been mounting for extra scrutiny of November’s election — and not just with domestic observers, as the Carter Center intends to.

“The United States touts itself as the democratic model that nations around the world should emulate. But if America really wants to be the exemplar of democracy, then it should prove its elections are, in fact, free and fair, and let the world watch,” The Boston Globe said in an editorial last month.

In a July report expressing concern about the U.S. vote, the European organizati­on said the 400 short-term observers would include some who would focus solely on media coverage in the days and hours leading up to the vote.

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