Saturday, November 12, 2022

These Counties Experiencing Election Issues Have One Thing In Common

By Mia Cathell | Townhall.com

AP Photo/Susan Walsh

It suffices to say that Election Day didn't go as planned for some polling places that experienced and are still experiencing ballot-counting issues. Despite the varying election-related difficulties, multiple jurisdictions share one foreseen commonality. There's a common thread connecting five counties spread across several states that were in disarray on Election Day: federal "monitors."

On the eve of the elections, the Biden administration's Department of Justice announced Monday it would be dispatching such monitors to as many as 64 jurisdictions in almost half of U.S. states on Election Day to oversee federal election law "compliance."

According to the DOJ's watch list, Pennsylvania's Luzerne County, Texas's Harris County, Arizona's Maricopa County, and Pima County, and Nevada's Washoe County all had the feds there "monitoring" polls. The nationwide deployment is a notable expansion. Nevada wasn't on the DOJ's roster two years ago during the presidential election cycle in 2020. Still, it was on the DOJ's radar this time, and Pima County—Arizona's second-most populous, which holds Tucscon—is among the new additions.

These five jurisdictions supposedly under in-person DOJ supervision throughout Tuesday suffered major muck-ups.

Luzerne County, the most populous county in northeastern Pennsylvania, had a serious supply shortage of the paper used in voting machines to tabulate ballots. It was an egregious Election Day depletion that stopped voting in dozens of the county's polling places, causing voters to be "turned away" and long lines for the patient Pennsylvanians who grinned and bared it. A court later issued an order allowing Luzerne County polls to remain open for two additional hours past closing time. The judge ordering the extension wrote: "Voters, through no fault of their own, were disenfranchised and denied the fundamental right to vote."

Voting sites across Harris County, the Lone Star State's largest county encompassing Houston, opened late on Election Day, prompting groups to file suit for an extra hour of voting, granted by a district court judge. After the court order was challenged by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican seeking re-election and winning, the Texas Supreme Court ruled that ballots cast at any of the county's 781 polls in the final hour should be placed aside for the time being.

Texans who arrived to vote after the normal closing time at 7 p.m. but were in line by 8 p.m. had to cast provisional ballots. According to the state's high court ruling, the provisional votes were to be kept separate from the overall tally. At the same time, the legal process played out, Houston Public Media reported, "sealed" away in an "envelope" instead of being inserted into the scanning machine and then tabulated at the "Central Count station" located inside of the massive Houston-based NRG Arena.

Mayhem erupted in Arizona's key Maricopa County, the country's second-largest voting jurisdiction, where ballots were being "misread" at a number of precincts. At one point in the day, tabulators in 20% of the county's polling locations weren't working properly, according to a video statement by Maricopa County election officials. Not-yet-tabulated ballots were to be kept in a "secure box" for tabulation in the evening at "Central Count," the county's Board of Supervisors chairman Bill Gates instructed.

After multiple printers were not producing dark-enough timing marks on ballots, the elections department that afternoon announced they'd identified a simple solution for the equipment malfunctioning at 60 voting centers: changing the printer settings.

Farther south in Pima County, election staff cited "a technology issue" that temporarily caused one voting center to be down temporarily.

GOP lawyer Harmeet Dhillon pointed out that Pima County Recorder Gabriella Cázares-Kelly, who has "she/her" pronouns and "dismantling white supremacy" in her Twitter bio, is "even more political and less cooperative than Maricopa." Both counties are "slow-walking results, hoping to outlast our legal and other observers," Dhillon tweeted Thursday. "Ain't gonna happen!"

Let's also remember that Katie Hobbs, the Democrat nominee in the hotly contested Grand Canyon State's gubernatorial race, happens to be Arizona's secretary of state. Yet, she has refused to recuse herself from official midterm duties overseeing and certifying election results while running against GOP darling Kari Lake. But don't pay attention to the Democrat behind the curtain.

Northwest in Nevada, a new batch of mail-in votes by the thousands is delaying final counts. In important Washoe County, a swing county and the state's second-most populous, 16,000-or-so mail-in ballots were expected to arrive, which would not be counted until Thursday because poll workers were so far behind. Last year, Nevada began requiring that mail-in ballots be sent to every registered voter. Although ballots must be postmarked by Election Day, they're countable upon arrival as late as Saturday.

As of Friday afternoon, we're still waiting on Arizona's and Nevada's respective election results with bated breath.

Hurricane-hit Florida, which was able to count all votes on Election Day even as parts of the Sunshine State were evacuated in preparation for another tropical storm about to make landfall, kicked the DOJ's hall monitors to the curb, barring any regime operatives from entering its polling places on the basis that outside monitoring is not permitted under the state's statutes.

In a letter addressed to DOJ elections coordinator John Russ, the state's general counsel Brad McVay wrote: "Department of Justice personnel is not included on the list. Even if they could qualify under 'law enforcement'...the presence of federal law enforcement inside polling places would be counterproductive and could potentially undermine confidence in the elections."

Florida's State Department invoked its authority under section 101.58(2) of the Florida Statutes to send its monitors to the jurisdictions "targeted" by Biden's DOJ to monitor the federal monitors and ensure there is "no interference with the voting process." After the 2022 midterm elections, the DeSantis administration declared that the letter was "successful," the DOJ obeyed Florida's declaration, and no federal personnel violated state law prohibiting entry, Florida's Voice reported Thursday morning.

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Arizona Senate Race Called for Democrat Incumbent Mark Kelly

By Spencer Brown | Townhall.com


Rob Schumacher/The Arizona Republic via AP, Pool

In the days-long saga that is Maricopa County's vote counting following Tuesday's midterm election, another batch of ballots favoring Incumbent Democrat Senator Mark Kelly dropped Friday evening around 10:00 p.m. ET that caused Decision Desk HQ to call the race for Kelly.

According to Decision Desk HQ, at the time the race was called, Kelly had a lead of nearly 124,000 votes in the grand tally, or nearly 52 percent to Masters' slightly more than 46 percent with an estimated 89 percent of votes counted. Libertarian candidate Marc Victor had 2.12 percent. 

The final drop of more than 70K ballots before Kelly's tight contest against Trump-endorsed challenger Blake Masters was called saw Kelly receive some 8,000 more votes than his GOP opponent.

On Thursday, Masters was optimistic on Twitter, predicting that the Democrat-favoring ballot drops would soon end and more ballots for him would begin being reported, but in the end more Kelly votes kept coming in. 

The call for Kelly on Friday night leaves just one big-ticket race left to settle out in the Grand Canyon State, the gubernatorial contest between Democrat Secretary of State Katie Hobbs and Republican Kari Lake. At present, DDHQ has the two divided by little more than 30,000 votes with Hobbs at 50.72 percent to Lake's 49.28 percent. 

On the national level, the Democrats' retention of Kelly's seat in the U.S. Senate brings the balance of power tally to 49 seats apiece for the two parties fighting to control the upper chamber. 

Nevada's U.S. Senate contest remains to be called, but hope remains alive for the GOP to flip the seat if Adam Laxalt defeats incumbent Catherine Cortez Masto. 

If Laxalt wins, the GOP then would need to also triumph in the Georgia runoff on December 6 in order to take the majority. If they lose one but not the other, then the U.S. Senate will remain unchanged as far as power dynamics go with a 50-50 split and the need for VP Kamala Harris to break any tie votes. But if Laxalt and Walker both lose, then Democrats gain the upper hand in the Senate with 51 seats. 

Thus, another day draws to a close without a definitive call yet on which party will be in control of the House or the Senate beginning in 2023.

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Nevada Gov Flips Red: Republican Joe Lombardo Projected Winner in Governor's Race

By Madeline Leesman | Townhall.com

Townhall Media

Days after Election Day, it was announced GOP candidate Joe Lombardo was projected to win the Nevada governor's race. This race would be a flip from incumbent Democrat Steve Sisolak to a Republican.

Decision Desk HQ announced the projection at 7:14 p.m. EST on Friday, Nov. 11.

The governor's race was deemed too early to call for several days this week, as well as elections in Arizona.

Lombardo served in the United States Army in the Army, National Guard, and Army Reserve, according to his website. After, Lombardo Joe began serving in law enforcement and has been doing so for 30 years.

Twenty-six years into his career in law enforcement, he was elected Sheriff of Clark County, Nevada in 2014.

Lombardo's website includes a blueprint of Democratic Gov. Sisolak's scandals, including scandals surrounding COVID-19 and the state's Department of Employment, Training, and Rehabilitation.

Decision Desk showed Lombardo, who was endorsed by former President Donald Trump, winning with just over 49 percent of the vote, compared to Sisolak's 47 percent.