The Day

Hands-down win in Granite State

Vote-counting machine foes gain little support in N.H.

- By NICK PERRY and HOLLY RAMER

Hopkinton, N.H. — Like the old saying about March itself, an orchestrat­ed effort to get rid of vote-counting machines in New Hampshire this month came in like a lion and went out like a lamb.

“Electronic machines will face the wrath of New Hampshire voters in March!” Mike Lindell, the MyPillow founder and ally of former President Donald Trump, crowed in a January fundraisin­g pitch.

Not quite. After initially targeting 55 towns, Lindell’s supporters gathered enough petitions to bring the topic up at 23 of the annual town meetings held this month to adopt budgets and settle other matters. Only Danville — population 4,500 — voted in favor of hand-counting ballots, and only for presidenti­al elections in a decision that both the town’s attorney and the secretary of state say is unlikely to stand.

“There was a lot of misinforma­tion that was being spread,” Secretary of State David Scanlan said Thursday. “I think the general public saw through it, and the votes at those town meetings reflect that.”

In New Hampshire, sinister flyers sent to some households described vote-counting machines as “flawed and hackable” and warned of manipulati­on. Most town officials disagreed, saying there was no evidence of any problems and that returning to hand counts would have been labor intensive and costly.

In Hopkinton, Selectboar­d Chair Sabrina Dunlap referenced the “baseless claims” made by outside groups in arguing against the hand-counting measure that was defeated Thursday night.

“The ballot machines are tested before every election, and this process is open to the public, as is the ballot-counting process,” she said. “The town has been using these machines for many, many years and our election officials confirm they are secure and accurate.”

Danville Selectman Shawn O’Neil, who championed the issue in his town, said he has faith in local election workers but has broad concerns about vote-counting machines. He limited the question to the presidenti­al race because it’s the nation’s top office.

“It sets the direction for the free world,” O’Neil said, adding that “if sinister people are going to be corrupt, they’re not going to do it for the Rockingham Register of Deeds office.”

The problem? Two months before the vote, Danville’s town attorney, Matt Serge, had advised O’Neil and the other selectmen that the vote likely wouldn’t stand. He said that is because under state law, “the town cannot pick and choose which votes are machine-counted and which are counted by hand.” Scanlan this week agreed, and said he is consulting with the state attorney general’s office on the matter.

 ?? NICK PERRY/AP PHOTO ?? Residents gather at the Inter-Lakes Middle/High School for the annual Meredith Town Meeting vote on March 13, in Meredith, N.H.
NICK PERRY/AP PHOTO Residents gather at the Inter-Lakes Middle/High School for the annual Meredith Town Meeting vote on March 13, in Meredith, N.H.

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