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Chuck Darwin

Any effort to challenge the election results will probably start at the local level.

Just as there was in 2020, there’s likely to be a period of uncertainty after election day when votes are still being counted in key swing states.

Two of those, 🔹Wisconsin and 🔹Pennsylvania, still do not allow election officials to begin to process mail-in ballots until election day.

“I’m definitely concerned that you’re gonna have a lot of efforts to disturb the process of counting those votes, if we go into the late evening, early hours of the next day and all of that,”
said Richard Pildes, a professor at New York University who specializes in election law.

The observers amassed by Cleta Mitchell and the RNC could have a significant role.

In 2020, chaotic confrontations at polling sites offered
that Trump and allies used in their effort to try to overturn the election.

Trump’s effort to challenge the election results in 🔹Arizona, for example, was undergirded by from observers and poll watchers who falsely claimed they saw ballots being
❌ rejected because of the type of pen voters were using.

In 🔹Georgia, Trump pointed to reports from observers in Atlanta falsely claiming they were
❌removed from the facility where mail-in ballots were counted.

In 🔹Michigan, Trump’s team used as evidence an “incident report” from an election observer who falsely said she heard workers giving instructions to
❌ count a rejected ballot.

Accusations of fraud may find a receptive audience at responsible for certifying elections.

Until 2020, no one gave much thought to these positions, sometimes filled by elected officials and other times by little-known party loyalists.

In 2020, Trump’s campaign made a strong effort to try to ⚠️delay certification at the local and state level as part of his effort to overturn the election.

In Wayne county, home of 🔹Detroit, Trump personally called two Republican canvassers on the board responsible for certifying the vote there. The two officials ⚠️briefly to certify, then themselves and did.

At the state level, Aaron Van Langevelde, a Republican on the state board of canvassers, faced ⚠️pressure not to certify the vote, but decided to anyway.

In 🔹Wisconsin, Republicans nearly got the state supreme court to ⚠️block certification of the state’s election.

In 🔹Arizona, Trump called the then governor, Doug Ducey, as he was certifying the vote amid a pressure campaign to ⚠️stop the certification of votes there.

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