Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

State GOP launches poll watcher training

RNC to recruit 100K nationwide to monitor voting

- Molly Beck

MADISON – The Republican National Committee and Trump campaign plan to deploy tens of thousands of volunteers and attorneys to monitor and challenge voting processes in battlegrou­nd states, including Wisconsin — an effort characteri­zed as safeguardi­ng from “Democrat tricks from 2020.”

GOP officials say they plan to recruit 100,000 people nationwide to observe election processes and voting, an expansion of typical activities for political parties in election years. The party’s rhetoric surroundin­g the plans, however, indicates its roots are in former President Donald Trump’s distortion­s of the 2020 election outcome, which has been confirmed in Wisconsin by judges, recounts, studies and audits.

“The Democrat tricks from 2020 won’t work this time. In 2024 we’re going to beat the Democrats at their own

“We were taken to court in 2020 multiple times, including by President Trump, and have always prevailed. I am confident our administra­tion will continue to withstand scrutiny.”

Claire Woodall executive director of the Milwaukee Election Commission

game and the RNC legal team will be working tirelessly to ensure that elections officials follow the rules in administer­ing elections. We will aggressive­ly take them to court if they don’t follow rules or try to change them at the last minute,” Charlie Spies, RNC chief counsel, said in a statement.

The party plans to conduct training sessions to teach volunteers how to observe polling sites and ballot tabulation centers.

“These trainings will equip volunteers with the necessary knowledge and skills to effectively oversee potential problems in the electoral process, guaranteei­ng that every vote is counted accurately and fairly,” GOP officials said in a news release.

The volunteers are to focus on early voting, Election Day voting, absentee ballot processing, post-election processes and “logic & accuracy machine testing.” A spokeswoma­n for the RNC did not respond to a request for details of what testing would entail.

“There are five areas of observatio­n where we will guarantee coverage and aggressive attorneys will be engaged at all these stages to stop Democrat attempts to circumvent rules,” the officials said.

Trump faces President Joe Biden in a rematch of the 2020 election, during which Biden defeated Trump by 4 percentage points. In Wisconsin,

Biden prevailed by about 21,000 votes. Wisconsin’s election was confirmed by lawsuits, Trump-financed recounts, state audits, a partisan legislativ­e review and a conservati­ve study.

But Trump has continued to claim he actually won in 2020, claims that fueled an attack on the U.S. Capitol in 2021 and have festered in Wisconsin among the Republican base.

In a recent training session conducted by state GOP officials, the party’s election integrity director Mike Hoffman said a focus would be placed on Democratic population centers like Eau Claire, Madison and Milwaukee, and recounted telling one clerk the party would be “keeping a close eye on you,” according to the New York Times.

A spokesman for the Republican Party of Wisconsin did not answer questions about whether the party’s monitoring efforts would extend to nonDemocra­tic-leaning areas.

Clerks in Madison and Dane County, where Trump sought to throw out tens of thousands of ballots in 2020, said they have not been contacted about the party’s effort to monitor processes.

Claire Woodall, executive director of the Milwaukee Election Commission, said she hosted Hoffman and GOP attorneys for a 90-minute tour of the city’s absentee ballot tabulation center, known as Central Count, on the night before the April presidenti­al primary election.

Trump has repeatedly falsely claimed Milwaukee’s process to count absentee ballots amounts to voter fraud because all of them are counted in one facility with totals reported all at once, often late on Election Day.

“We are always happy to answer questions about process, procedure, and ensure open lines of communicat­ion between our office and both major political parties,” Woodall said. “As you know, we strictly follow state statute and there were no sudden changes or deviations from the rules in 2020. We were taken to court in 2020 multiple times, including by President Trump, and have always prevailed. I am confident our administra­tion will continue to withstand scrutiny.”

A spokesman for the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission did not respond to questions about whether the RNC has reached out to the commission regarding their election efforts.

Ann Jacobs, a Democratic member of the commission who was chairwoman during the 2020 election, said the rhetoric surroundin­g the GOP effort is likely intended to appease Trump’s base.

“It strikes me that what this is, is trying to appease a base that wrongly believes that there were impropriet­ies in the election that can be discovered and prevented through this sort of oversight by lay people,” Jacobs said. “And here in Wisconsin, what we know is we had an election and the votes were properly counted.”

“... The idea that this is going to be some sort of groundbrea­king situation where they’re able to find impropriet­ies that are going to affect the election, just isn’t going to happen. But they’re welcome to come watch.”

The Democratic National Committee and state Democratic party also monitor election issues, including at polling places and at the state level, according to Democratic officials. The state party operates a voter hotline and helps voters who lack photo identification to meet legal requiremen­ts to vote.

“Donald Trump and his Republican allies are running a large-scale voter suppressio­n campaign to make voting harder and undermine faith in fair elections just like they did in 2020,” Addy Toevs, spokeswoma­n for the DNC, said.

“Democrats will continue to invest in protecting free elections and empower Wisconsini­tes to make their voices heard in this critical November election. We won’t let Trump and MAGA Republican­s get away with their dirty tricks.”

 ?? JOVANNY HERNANDEZ/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Milwaukee Election Commission executive director Claire Woodall, left, finalizes the ballot counting process by exporting results from tabulators as election observers challenge the seal process of the USB drive on Nov. 8, 2022, at Central Count at the Wisconsin Center in Milwaukee.
JOVANNY HERNANDEZ/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Milwaukee Election Commission executive director Claire Woodall, left, finalizes the ballot counting process by exporting results from tabulators as election observers challenge the seal process of the USB drive on Nov. 8, 2022, at Central Count at the Wisconsin Center in Milwaukee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States