A bipartisan group of election officials briefed reporters Wednesday about the voting already underway in their states, and what they’re doing to make sure the election goes smoothly over the next few weeks.
Here are some key takeaways:
Fallout from new Georgia election rules: Zach Manifold, the elections supervisor for Gwinnett County, which is in the Atlanta area, condemned the Georgia State Election Board for imposing new hand-count requirements. Trump loyalists on the board?approved the rules?last month over bipartisan objections.
“It’s not an ideal situation – not something we really want to see,” Manifold said, pointing out that nonpartisan election officials were “very vocal” in their opposition before the board approved the rule.
Nonetheless, he said “we are moving forward” to train staff and brace for potential delays to the public reporting of results, because the new rules force counties to verify by hand that the number of ballots counted by the machine matches the number of ballots that were cast at every precinct. He said this would likely have a disproportionate impact on smaller and medium sized counties, slowing their results.
The cost of keeping RFK Jr. on the ballot. An election official from Durham County, North Carolina, said his county spent more than $50,000 to reprint ballots after a court fight involving Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
After RFK Jr. endorsed Trump, he tried to take his name off some state ballots, though he missed the deadline in some places. The North Carolina State Board of Elections ruled that it was too late to redo the ballots in the state, but the North Carolina Supreme Court?later ruled?that he must be removed.
Officials in Durham County had already spent about $60,000 to print many of their ballots before the ruling,?according to Derek Bowens, director of elections for Durham County.?They were then?forced to pay another $50,000 to go back to their vendor and re-do all the ballots that had already been printed with RFK?Jr’s name, he said.
“It came with a 25% markup, due to the rush nature of reprinting the ballots,” Bowens said.?“The ballot reprint added a thread to the equation that certainly has complicated our processes this election.”
Securing mail-in ballots.?Officials from across the country stressed that mail-in voting is reliable and secure, despite false claims from former President Donald Trump that is riddled with massive fraud.
Santa Fe County Clerk Katherine Clark described the extraordinary lengths her office takes to make sure the process is safeguarded. For instance, there is round-the-clock video surveillance of ballot drop boxes and drive-through locations, and they put GPS trackers on all the “ballot bags” that contain mail ballots.
“I have a dashboard and it shows me exactly where my ballot bags are,” Clark said.
More about the briefing: The Wednesday briefing was organized by the Partnership for Large Election Jurisdictions, a nonprofit group that works with nearly 100 of the biggest election offices across the country.