Baltimore Sun

‘We must protect election officials’

As midterms loom, swing states beef up security amid threats

- By Neil Vigdor

In Wisconsin, one of the nation’s key swing states, cameras and plexiglass now fortify the reception area of a county election office in Madison, the capital, after a man wearing camouflage and a mask tried to open locked doors during an election in April.

In another bellwether area, Maricopa County, Arizona, where beleaguere­d election workers had to be escorted through a scrum of election deniers to reach their cars in 2020, a security fence was added to protect the perimeter of a vote tabulation center.

And in Colorado, the state’s top election official, Jena Griswold, the secretary of state and a Democrat, resorted to paying for private security out of her budget after a stream of threats.

As the nation hurtles closer to the Nov. 8 midterm elections, those who will oversee them are taking a range of steps to beef up security for themselves, their employees, polling places and even drop boxes, tapping state and federal funding for a new set of defenses.

The heightened vigilance comes as violent rhetoric from the right intensifie­s and as efforts to intimidate election officials by those who refuse to accept the results of the 2020 election become commonplac­e.

Discussing security in a recent interview with The New York Times, Griswold, 37, said that threats of violence had kept her and her aides up late at night as they combed through comments on social media.

At a right-wing group’s gathering in Colorado earlier this year, she said, an

election denier with militia ties suggested that she should be killed. That was when she concluded that her part-time security detail provided by the Colorado State Patrol wasn’t enough.

“They called for me to be hung,” said Griswold, who is running for reelection. “It’s a long weekend. I’m home alone, and I only get seven hours of State Patrol coverage.”

Even in places where there was never a shadow of a doubt about the political leanings of the electorate, election officials have found themselves under threat. In a Texas county that former President Donald Trump won by 59 percentage points in 2020, all three election officials recently resigned, with at least one citing repeated death threats and stalking.

One in 5 local election officials who responded to a survey earlier this year by the Brennan Center for Justice said that they were “very” or “somewhat unlikely” to continue serving through 2024.

The collective angst is a recurring theme at workshops and conference­s attended by election officials, who say it is not unusual for them to exchange anecdotes about threatenin­g messages or harassment at the grocery store.

The discussion­s have turned at times to testing drop boxes — a focus of right-wing attacks on mail-in voting — to see if they can withstand being set on fire.

Benjamin Hovland, a member of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission,

described the intimidati­on campaign as pervasive.

“This isn’t a red-state issue or a blue-state issue,” Hovland said. “This is a national issue.”

Michigan’s top election official, Jocelyn Benson, 44, who is a Democrat, has a security detail from the state when she needs it. She described a time in December 2020 when a group gathered outside her Detroit home to call for her to overturn Joe Biden’s victory in Michigan. Some of them were armed.

“I was about to put my son to bed, and dozens of individual­s descended on our home,” Benson said. A neighborho­od security guard initially was the only one separating the home from the crowd, which shouted obscenitie­s that she said woke up her neighbors.

“It was a very haunting moment,” said Benson, who was interviewe­d about the confrontat­ion as part of the congressio­nal inquiry into the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Michigan received $8 million in federal election funds that Benson said local election officials could spend on physical security and efforts to tamp down misinforma­tion.

Still, in testimony last month before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, Benson urged the federal government to set aside more money for security.

“To protect democracy, we must protect election officials,” Benson, who is running for reelection, said last week.

In Colorado, Trump’s allies have frequently tussled over election oversight with Griswold, who said her office had compiled a 60-page PDF detailing the hundreds of threats that she had received.

On two occasions, the threats have led to criminal charges: One man was arrested in July over a threatenin­g phone call, and in June, a Nebraska man pleaded guilty to threatenin­g Griswold on Instagram. It was the first conviction resulting from the work of a Justice Department task force focused on the intimidati­on of election officials.

Griswold drew a comparison between those making violent threats toward election officials and the people who took part in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

“We have to take threats of violence seriously,” Griswold said. “We have to disincenti­vize it.”

 ?? ADRIANA ZEHBRAUSKA­S/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Election workers on Aug. 2 in Phoenix, where Maricopa County has built up election security measures since 2020.
ADRIANA ZEHBRAUSKA­S/THE NEW YORK TIMES Election workers on Aug. 2 in Phoenix, where Maricopa County has built up election security measures since 2020.

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