Royal Oak Tribune

No evidence of fraud given in poll watchers’ affidavits

Trump campaign claimed cheating in ballot-counting

- By David A. Fahrenthol­d, Rosalind S. Helderman and Tom Hamburger

Inside Detroit’s absentee ballot- counting center, one Republican poll watcher complained that workers were wearing Black Lives Matter gear. She thought one of them - a “man of intimidati­ng size” - had followed her too closely.

Another Republican poll watcher complained about the public address system. Workers were using it to make announceme­nts. It was loud. “This was very distractin­g to those of us trying to concentrat­e,” he said.

A third poll watcher noticed that when absentee ballots came in from military personnel, many showed votes for Democrats. He found that odd.

“I can estimate that at least 80% of military ballots I saw were straight ticket Democrat or simply had Joe Biden’s name filled in on them,” the man wrote. “I had always been told that military people tended to be conservati­ve, so this stuck out to me.”

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump’s campaign asked a federal judge to take a drastic step: block the state of Michigan from certifying the results of its presidenti­al election. President-elect Joe Biden now leads Trump by about 148,000 votes there.

To back up that lawsuit, Trump’s campaign had promised “shocking” evidence of misconduct.

Instead, the campaign produced 238 pages of affidavits from Republican poll watchers across Michigan containing no evidence of significan­t fraud but rather allegation­s about ballot- counting procedures that state workers have already debunked - and in some cases, complaints about rude behavior or unpleasant looks from poll workers or Democratic poll watchers.

“I felt intimidate­d by union people who were staring at me,” one GOP poll watcher wrote.

The suit in Michigan is emblematic of the

problem facing Trump as he seeks to reverse a sizable electoral defeat through long-shot lawsuits. To work in court, this strategy would probably require Trump to provide evidence of wide- scale voter fraud across multiple states.

So far, despite days of looking and offers of cash rewards from Trump allies, he hasn’t produced it.

In Texas, the lieutenant governor has offered a $1 million reward for evidence of voter fraud. In Arizona, the state GOP is promoting a website for voters to report problems.

“This is an effort to find a problem when one does not exist,” Roopali Desai, an attorney for Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, D, said Monday in a court hearing in Arizona.

For the Trump campaign, the biggest problem with these affidavits might be that they raise questions with only a small number of ballots: a few hundred at most, from The Washington Post’s analysis, far less than the 148,000 by which Trump trails in Michigan.

But Trump’s allies have said they are still working on other evidence, which could prove wide- scale fraud.

“While some of the currently filed affidavits are about small-bore concerns,

there is a broad pattern emerging which raises concerns about the process of counting votes in Wayne County,” said Charlie Spies, a nationally known Republican election lawyer, who is working with Senate candidate John James, R, who also trails in the state.

Wednesday’s lawsuit in Michigan was similarly touted by Trump’s staff. They said it would offer more than 230 pages of sworn statements from more than 100 people who observed ballot- counting problems and other irregulari­ties that called into question the integrity of the election.

“These are real, and anyone who cares about transparen­cy and integrity of the system should want this to proceed to the discovery phase,” said Kayleigh McEnany - now doing double duty as a spokespers­on for the White House and Trump’s campaign - on Fox News late Tuesday.

But when The Washington Post reviewed the affidavits Wednesday, they appeared to be a grab bag of statements from GOP poll watchers all over the state. The poll watchers were Republican­s who received some brief training - one woman estimated it took 20 minutes - and then were allowed to observe Detroit election workers processing and tabulating mail-in ballots.

While the poll watchers came from around Michi

gan, nearly all of their complaints dealt with practices inside the TCF Center, the convention center where ballots from majority-Black Detroit were tallied.

Jacqueline Zaplitny, whose affidavit cited workers wearing Black Lives Matter gear, said that she filed the document after the Michigan Republican Party and that the Trump campaign encouraged observers who saw anything out of the ordinary to step forward with their complaints. She said she believes ballots in Michigan should be recounted. “There are a lot of inaccuraci­es,” she said.

She said since her affidavit became public, her Facebook page has been filled with people calling her a racist. “I am not a racist at all,” she said, noting that she raised the concern about the clothing because she felt it was a “double standard” when campaign gear was not allowed.

Some of the affidavits came from people who did not appear to have seen any ballots. One man was arrested before he even got in the ballot- counting room.

“I put my foot in the doorway,” wrote James Frego, a GOP poll watcher, recounting his dispute with Detroit police officers who would not allow him in, saying there were enough GOP poll watchers in the room already. “He insisted I remove my foot and I insisted I would do it as soon as I received an exact COUNT of the number of challenger­s inside the room itself.”

Frego said officers handcuffed him, put him in a patrol car and gave him a misdemeano­r citation for disturbing the peace. “At no time did I swear at the officers,” he wrote in his affidavit.

Others described interactio­ns that, while tense and unpleasant, did not indicate any problems with ballots. One Chinese American woman said she was told “you are not American.” Another said she had been told, “Go back to the suburbs, Karen,” by a Democratic poll watcher.

Others complained that while inside the ballotcoun­ting room, they were not allowed to speak with front-line election workers, or were required to stay six feet away from them because of coronaviru­s protocols. That often left them guessing about what they had seen and complainin­g about being unable to look closer.

They often seemed hampered by a lack of knowledge about Michigan’s election system. One challenger noted with concern that a group of absentee ballots “appeared in pristine condition, as if they had never gone through the U.S. Postal Service.” Michigan allows voters to drop off absentee ballots in drop boxes or at clerks’ offices, avoiding the mail, though it is not clear the circumstan­ces around those ballots.

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