San Francisco Chronicle

3 states deny requests from Russia to monitor election

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OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma and at least two other states said Friday that they have denied efforts by Russian officials to be present at polling stations during the election, requests the U.S. State Department’s spokesman dismissed as “nothing more than a PR stunt.”

The Oklahoma secretary of state’s office said it received a letter in August from Russia’s consulate general in Houston seeking to have one of its officers present at a voting precinct to study the “US experience in organizati­on of voting process.” But the office denied the request, noting Oklahoma law prohibits anyone except election officials and voters from being present while voting is taking place.

Election officials in Louisiana and Texas said they denied similar requests from Russian officials.

While there is a formal process for foreign government­s to observe U.S. elections, individual states maintain the authority to approve or deny those requests, said State Department spokesman Mark Toner.

“Any suggestion that we rejected Russia’s proposal to observe our elections is false,” Toner said in a statement. “Individual parties — foreign government­s, NGOs, etc. — are welcome to apply to state government­s to observe our elections.”

Russia hasn’t participat­ed in an internatio­nal mission to observe elections, so its effort to do so on the state level represents “nothing more than a PR stunt,” Toner said.

White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said the purpose of the requests was uncertain. He added it was “appropriat­e” that people might be suspicious of Russia’s motives given that its government is believed responsibl­e for recent cases of computer hacking into U.S. political campaigns.

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