The Norwalk Hour

Midterm elections avoided feared chaos

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Before Election Day, anxiety mounted over potential chaos at the polls.

Election officials warned about poll watchers who had been steeped in conspiracy theories falsely claiming that then-President Donald Trump did not actually lose the 2020 election. Democrats and voting rights groups worried about the effects of new election laws, in some Republican-controlled states, that President Joe Biden decried as “Jim Crow 2.0.” Law enforcemen­t agencies were monitoring possible threats at the polls.

Yet Election Day, and the weeks of early voting before it, went fairly smoothly. There were some reports of unruly poll watchers disrupting voting, but they were scattered. Groups of armed vigilantes began watching over a handful of ballot drop boxes in Arizona until a judge ordered them to stay far away to ensure they would not intimidate voters. And while it might take months to figure out their full impact, GOPbacked voting laws enacted after the 2020 election did not appear to cause major disruption­s the way they did during the March primary in Texas.

“The entire ecosystem in a lot of ways has become more resilient in the aftermath of 2020,” said Amber McReynolds, a former Denver elections director who advises a number of voting rights organizati­ons. “There’s been a lot of effort on ensuring things went well.”

Even though some voting experts’ worst fears didn’t materializ­e, some voters still experience­d the types of routine foul-ups that happen on a small scale in every election. Many of those fell disproport­ionately on Black and Hispanic voters.

“Things went better than expected,” said Amir Badat of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. “But we have to say that with a caveat: Our expectatio­ns are low.”

Badat said his organizati­on recorded long lines at various polling places from South Carolina to Texas.

There were particular problems in Harris County, Texas, which includes Houston. Shortages of paper ballots and at least one polling location opening late led to long lines and triggered an investigat­ion of the predominan­tly Democratic county by the state’s Republican authoritie­s.

The investigat­ion is partly a reflection of how certain voting snafus on Election Day are increasing­ly falling on Republican voters, who have been discourage­d from using mailed ballots or using early in-person voting by Trump and his allies. But it’s a very different problem from what Texas had during its March primary.

Then, a controvers­ial new voting law that increased the requiremen­ts on mail ballots led to about 13% of all such ballots being rejected, much higher compared with other elections. It was an ominous sign for a wave of new laws, passed after Trump’s loss to Biden and false claims about mail voting, but there have been no problems of that scale reported for the general election.

Texas changed the design of its mail ballots, which solved many of the problems voters had putting identifyin­g informatio­n in the proper place. Other states that added regulation­s on voting didn’t appear to have widespread problems, though voting rights groups and analysts say it will take weeks of combing through data to find out the laws’

impacts.

The Brennan Center for Justice at the NYU School of Law is compiling data to determine whether new voting laws in states such as Georgia contribute­d to a drop in turnout among Black and Hispanic voters.

Preliminar­y figures show turnout was lower this year than in the last midterm election four years ago in Florida, Georgia, Iowa and Texas — four states that passed significan­t voting restrictio­ns since the 2020 election — although there could be a number of reasons why.

“It’s difficult to judge, empiricall­y, the kind of effect these laws have on turnout because so many factors go into turnout,” said Rick Hasen, an election law expert at the University of California, Los Angeles law school. “You

also have plenty of exaggerati­on on the Democratic side that any kind of change in voting laws are going to cause some major effect on the election, which has been proven not to be the case.”

In Georgia, for example, Republican­s made it more complicate­d to apply for mailed ballots after the 2020 election — among other things, requiring voters to include their driver’s license number or some other form of identifica­tion rather than a signature. That may be one reason why early in-person voting soared in popularity in the state this year, and turnout there dipped only slightly from 2018.

Jason Snead, executive director of the conservati­ve Honest Elections Project, which advocates for tighter voting laws, said the fairly

robust turnout in the midterm elections shows that fears of the new voting regulation­s were overblown.

“We are on the back end of an election that was supposed to be the end of democracy, and it very much was not,” Snead said.

Poll watchers were a significan­t concern of voting rights groups and election officials heading into Election Day. The representa­tives of the two major political parties are a key part of any secure election process, credential­ed observers who can object to perceived violations of rules.

But this year, groups aligned with conspiracy theorists who challenged Biden’s 2020 victory recruited poll watchers heavily, and some states

reported that aggressive volunteers caused disruption­s during the primary. But there were fewer issues in November.

In North Carolina, where several counties had reported problems with poll watchers in the May primary, the state elections board reported 21 incidents of misbehavio­r at the polls in the general election, most during the early, inperson voting period and by members of campaigns rather than poll watchers. The observers were responsibl­e for eight of the incidents.

Voting experts were pleasantly surprised there weren’t more problems with poll watchers, marking the second general election in a row when a feared threat of aggressive Republican observers did not materializ­e.

“This seems to be an increase over 2020. Is it a small increase? Yes,” said Michael McDonald, a political scientist at the University of Florida. “It’s still a dry run for 2024, and we can’t quite let down our guard.”

One of the main organizers of the poll watcher effort was Cleta Mitchell, a veteran Republican election lawyer who joined Trump on a Jan. 2, 2020, call to Georgia’s top election official when the president asked that the state “find” enough votes to declare him the winner. Mitchell then launched an organizati­on to train volunteers who wanted to keep an eye on election officials, which was seen as the driver of the poll watcher surge.

Mitchell said the relatively quiet election is vindicatio­n that groups like hers were simply concerned with election integrity rather than causing disruption­s.

“Every training conducted by those of us doing such training included instructio­n about behavior, and that they must be ‘Peaceful, Lawful, Honest,’” Mitchell wrote in the conservati­ve online publicatio­n The Federalist. “Yet, without evidence, the closer we got to Election Day, the more hysterical the headlines became, warning of violence at the polls resulting from too many observers watching the process. It didn’t happen.”

Voting rights groups say they’re relieved their fears didn’t materializ­e, but they say threats to democracy remain on the horizon for 2024 — especially with Trump announcing that he’s running again. Wendy Weiser, a voting and elections expert at the Brennan Center, agreed that things overall went smoother than expected.

“By and large, sabotage didn’t happen,” Weiser said. “I don’t think that means we’re in the clear.”

 ?? Matt York / Associated Press ?? A voter drops off her ballot at a drop box on Nov. 7 in Mesa, Ariz. Fears of aggressive poll watchers sowing chaos at polling stations or conservati­ve groups trying to intimidate votes didn't materializ­e on Election Day as many election officials and voting rights experts had feared. Voting proceeded smoothly across most of the U.S., with a few exceptions of scattered disruption­s.
Matt York / Associated Press A voter drops off her ballot at a drop box on Nov. 7 in Mesa, Ariz. Fears of aggressive poll watchers sowing chaos at polling stations or conservati­ve groups trying to intimidate votes didn't materializ­e on Election Day as many election officials and voting rights experts had feared. Voting proceeded smoothly across most of the U.S., with a few exceptions of scattered disruption­s.
 ?? K.M. Cannon / Tribune News Service ?? Voters brave high winds and raindrops while waiting in line on Election Day at Desert Breeze Community Center in Las Vegas on Nov. 8.
K.M. Cannon / Tribune News Service Voters brave high winds and raindrops while waiting in line on Election Day at Desert Breeze Community Center in Las Vegas on Nov. 8.

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