The Mercury News

`Horrific' loss of election officials since 2020 election is alarming

- By Mark Z. Barabak Mark Z. Barabak is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2022 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

In the combustibl­e days and weeks following the November 2020 election, Adrian Fontes was threatened so many times he lost count.

As Maricopa County recorder, Fontes oversaw the balloting in Phoenix and its sprawling suburbs, the swing portion of a swing state and one of the focal points of President Donald Trump's efforts to overturn Joe Biden's victory.

With tensions mounting, as armed demonstrat­ors gathered outside his office and a SWAT team parked itself inside, Fontes packed “go bags” so his wife and children could quickly flee their home.

A new survey by the Brennan Center for Justice found 1 in 6 election officials nationwide said they have been threatened, part of a dramatic rise in tensions as voting and elections have become an increasing political flashpoint.

“These attacks have forced election officials across the country to take steps like hiring personal security, fleeing their homes and putting their children into counseling,” according to the center, a research and policy organizati­on affiliated with New York University.

“It's insanity,” said Fontes, who lost his 2020 reelection bid. “It's anti-American.”

More than 1 in 4 of those surveyed by the Brennan Center said they were concerned about being assaulted.

More troubling, 30% said they knew of at least one election worker who had left the position in part because of intimidati­on or increased threats.

Looking to November's balloting and beyond, 60% of election officials expressed concern that harassment and safety concerns will make it more difficult to recruit and retain the workers vital to running the country's election machinery.

That's a void Trump acolytes are happy to fill.

It bears repeating that, despite Trump's continued and incessant lies, U.S officials judged the Nov. 3, 2020, election — which saw record-high turnout amid the worst pandemic in a century — “the most secure” in the country's history.

“There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes or was in any way compromise­d,” the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement co-signed by some of Trump's own appointees.

That fact hasn't stopped the continued assault on the country's election systems and its front-line workers, who deserve more than the protective efforts undertaken so far by lawmakers.

The Justice Department last year created a task force to prosecute people who threaten election workers and in January charged a Texas man who posted a message urging “patriots” on Craigslist to shoot three Georgia officials. Here's hoping more cases follow.

The spending bill the Senate passed last week and sent to President Biden included $75 million for election security. But that's a fraction of what the Brennan Center estimates is needed over the next several years to update equipment and protect election integrity.

In Oregon, the Legislatur­e passed a bill upping the penalty for harassing election workers and helping prevent their home addresses from being made public.

In California, Democratic state Sen. Josh Newman of Fullerton introduced similar legislatio­n that would give election workers the option of enrolling in the privacy protection program available to judges, politician­s and victims of domestic abuse, so they could keep their personal informatio­n private.

All of which are a good start. Still, the majority of election workers surveyed by the Brennan Center felt the federal government hasn't done enough to protect them. More than 3 in 4 also believe social media companies could do a better job stopping the spread of false informatio­n that has left so many of them under siege.

Fontes, a former Marine, said many election officials take the job for the same reason people enlist in the military. “It's a calling,” he said. “It's a duty.”

Not one, however, that should carry the risk of physical danger or emotional abuse.

“This is horrific for our democracy,” said Fontes, who is running for secretary of state in Arizona. “They're intimidati­ng good people out of these jobs so they can replace them with sycophants. It's not complicate­d, and people should care. Because it's happening right under our noses.”

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