SPECIAL
REPORT
‘It’s going to be an army’: Tapes reveal GOP plan
to contest elections
Placing operatives as poll workers and building a
"hotline" to friendly attorneys are among the strategies to be
deployed in Michigan and other swing states.
By HEIDI
PRZYBYLA
06/01/2022
06:30 AM EDT
Heidi
Przybyla is a Washington D.C. journalist.
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/06/01/gop-contest-elections-tapes-00035758
Video
recordings of Republican Party operatives meeting with grassroots activists
provide an inside look at a multi-pronged strategy to target and potentially
overturn votes in Democratic precincts: Install trained recruits as regular
poll workers and put them in direct contact with party attorneys.
The plan,
as outlined by a Republican National Committee staffer in Michigan, includes
utilizing rules designed to provide political balance among poll workers to
install party-trained volunteers prepared to challenge voters at
Democratic-majority polling places, developing a website to connect those
workers to local lawyers and establishing a network of party-friendly district
attorneys who could intervene to block vote counts at certain precincts.
“Being a
poll worker, you just have so many more rights and things you can do to stop
something than [as] a poll challenger,” said Matthew Seifried, the RNC’s
election integrity director for Michigan, stressing the importance of obtaining
official designations as poll workers in a meeting with GOP activists in Wayne
County last Nov. 6. It is one of a series of recordings of GOP meetings between
summer of 2021 and May of this year obtained by POLITICO.
Backing up
those front-line workers, “it’s going to be an army,” Seifried promised at an
Oct. 5 training session. “We’re going to have more lawyers than we’ve ever
recruited, because let’s be honest, that’s where it’s going to be fought,
right?”
Seifried
also said the RNC will hold “workshops” and equip poll workers with a hotline
and website developed by Zendesk, a software support company used by online
retailers, which will allow them to live-chat with party attorneys on Election
Day. In a May 2022 training session, he said he’d achieved a goal set last
winter: More than 5,600 individuals had signed up to be poll workers and,
several days ago, he submitted an initial list of more than 850 names to the
Detroit clerk.
Democrat
Janice Winfrey, who serves as the clerk, would be bound to pick names from the
list submitted by the party under a local law intended to ensure bipartisan
representation and an unbiased team of precinct workers.
Separately,
POLITICO obtained Zoom tapings of Tim Griffin, legal counsel to The Amistad
Project, a self-described election-integrity group that Donald Trump’s former
lawyer Rudy Giuliani once portrayed as a “partner” in the Trump campaign’s
legal efforts to overturn the 2020 election, meeting with activists from
multiple states and discussing plans for identifying friendly district
attorneys who could stage real-time interventions in local election disputes.
On the
recording, Griffin speaks of building a nationwide network of district attorney
allies and how to create a legal “trap” for Winfrey.
“Remember,
guys, we’re trying to build out a nationwide district attorney network. Your
local district attorney, as we always say, is more powerful than your
congressman,” Griffin said during a Sept. 21 meeting. “They’re the ones that
can seat a grand jury. They’re the ones that can start an investigation, issue
subpoenas, make sure that records are retained, etc.,” he said.
POLITICO obtained about a dozen recordings from people
who were invited to listen to the meetings. Seifried referred POLITICO’s
requests for comment to the RNC. Griffin, through the Thomas More Society,
which runs Amistad, did not return repeated calls and texts to spokesperson Tom
Ciesielka.
A
spokesperson for the RNC said the party is attempting to rectify an imbalance
in favor of Democratic election workers in large urban areas, particularly
Detroit, a city that votes reliably Democratic by more than 90 percent. Just
170 of more than 5,400 Detroit election officials were Republicans in 2020,
according to the RNC.
“Democrats
have had a monopoly on poll watching for 40 years, and it speaks volumes that
they’re terrified of an even playing field,” said RNC spokesperson Gates
McGavick. “The RNC is focused on training volunteers to take part in the
election process because polling shows that American voters want bipartisan
poll-watching to ensure transparency and security at the ballot box.”
In the introduction
graphic on his training presentation, Seifried says the RNC’s goal is to “make
it easy to vote and HARD TO CHEAT.”
But
election watchdog groups and legal experts say many of these recruits are
answering the RNC’s call because they falsely believe fraud was committed in
the 2020 election, so installing them as the supposedly unbiased officials who
oversee voting at the precinct level could create chaos in such heavily
Democratic precincts.
“This is
completely unprecedented in the history of American elections that a political
party would be working at this granular level to put a network together,” said
Nick Penniman, founder and CEO of Issue One, an election watchdog group. “It
looks like now the Trump forces are going directly after the legal system itself
and that should concern everyone.”
Penniman
also expressed concern about the quick-strike networks of lawyers and DAs being
created, suggesting that politically motivated poll workers could simply
initiate a legal conflict at the polling place that disrupts voting and then
use it as a vehicle for rejecting vote counts from that precinct.
Democratic
National Committee spokesperson Ammar Moussa said the DNC “trains poll watchers
to help every eligible voter cast a ballot,” but neither the DNC nor the state
party trains poll workers. The DNC did help recruit poll workers in 2020 due to
a drop-off in older workers amid the pandemic; but he says it is not currently
doing so and has never trained poll workers to contest votes.
On the
tapes, some of the would-be poll workers lamented that fraud was committed in
2020 and that the election was “corrupt.” Installing party loyalists on the
Board of Canvassers, which is responsible for certifying the election, also
appears to be part of the GOP strategy. In Wayne County, which includes
Detroit, Republicans nominated to their board a man who said he would not have
certified the 2020 election.
Both
Penniman and Rick Hasen, a law and political science professor at the
University of California, Irvine School of Law, said they see a domino effect
that could sow doubts about the election even when there was no original
infraction: A politically motivated poll worker connecting with a zealous local
lawyer to disrupt voting, followed by a challenge to the Board of Canvassers
that may have nothing to do with the underlying dispute but merely the level of
disruption at the polling place.
“You
shouldn’t have poll workers who are reporting to political organizations what
they see,” Hasen said. “It creates the potential for mucking things up at
polling places and potentially leading to delays or disenfranchisement of
voters,” especially “if [the poll workers] come in with the attitude that
something is crooked with how elections are run.”
‘The precinct
strategy’
The
recordings are among the first windows into what former Trump strategist
Stephen Bannon, who’s been urging listeners to his podcast to take on election
leadership positions, calls “the precinct strategy.”
But
Penniman, the election watchdog, believes the strategy is designed to create
enough disputes to justify intervention by GOP-controlled state legislatures,
who declined to take such steps in 2020.
“Come
election day you create massive failure of certification” in Democratic precincts,
Penniman said. “The real hope is that you can throw the choosing of electors to
state legislatures.”
Participants
in the recorded training sessions said their goal is to root out fraud, not
just achieve more Republican poll workers in majority Democratic precincts.
Among
panelists at a May 14 “Election Integrity” summit in Detroit was Jacky Eubanks,
a Trump-endorsed state house candidate who warned “kids my age who are
communists do and will staff our elections” in urging Republicans to become
“paid, full-time elections workers” to police absentee ballot signatures,
according to a recording of the summit.
Speaking
separately to Macomb County Republicans, Eubanks also recently said, “The
election system is rigged, and who best to steal it but our clerks.”
During the
May 14 election-integrity summit, Seifried said the party is now actively
recruiting lawyers and that he wanted to “start reaching out to law
enforcement.”
Patrick
Colbeck, a former member of the Michigan state Senate and former gubernatorial
candidate, said at the same summit that he is “working with another
organization right now” on “developing a kit for law enforcement” because many
don’t understand election law and it will give them “tools that identify and
enforce election fraud more effectively.”
Eubanks did
not respond to requests for comment. In an email to POLITICO, Colbeck said
there should be “regular training” for law enforcement on election laws.
A focus on
Michigan
A central
theater for the party’s “election integrity” organizing, Michigan is among a
number of battleground states where party loyalists are being groomed to serve
as inspectors in the next presidential election. Seifried estimated the RNC is
committing $35 million to election integrity efforts nationwide, similar to
what it spent in the last cycle in battleground state efforts. He is one of 16
state directors.
For
decades, the RNC was barred from so-called “ballot security” measures after it
settled an early 1980s case in which it was accused of voter suppression in
violation of the Voting Rights Act, including sending armed police officers off
duty to polling places in minority areas. In 2018, a federal judge allowed that
consent decree to expire.
“The 2020
election would have been the first year that the RNC could have done anything
with election integrity,” said Seifried in the tapes.
Of all
former President Donald Trump’s battleground-state allies, Republican
operatives in the state of Michigan came the closest to throwing the 2020
election — and the nation — into a constitutional crisis. So many volunteer
challengers overwhelmed Detroit’s TCF Center, where votes were being counted,
that police intervened because Covid safety protocols had been breached.
The poll
watchers accused poll workers of “bullying” them and blocking them from voting
tables due to pandemic social distancing requirements. They also falsely
alleged “phony ballots” were smuggled into the center, helping lay the
predicate for a weeks-long delay in certifying the state’s electoral votes.
That’s despite the fact that then-Democratic candidate Joe Biden had won the
state by more than 154,000 votes.
In the
recorded meeting with activists in March, Seifried said there “was a lot of
disorganization, a lot of lack of preparedness and I’ve heard horror story
after horror story,” referring to the GOP watchers barred by police due to
Covid restrictions.
“We’re
going to have lawyers that work to build relationships with different judges so
that when that happens, we’re going to have lawyers that have relationships
with the police chiefs in the different areas, with the police officers in the
different areas so that when that happens with preexisting relationships
already established so that they can’t lie,” Seifried said during an October
2021 training session in Oakland County.
A GOP-led
committee found no evidence of widespread fraud in Michigan’s 2020 election and
recommended the state’s attorney general investigate those who made false
claims “to raise money or publicity for their own ends.” Numerous lawsuits were
dismissed in court.
In the
tapes, Seifried cites specific grievances from 2020: that “unsolicited”
absentee ballots were mailed by the Secretary of State, that not all clerks
were required to match signatures on absentee ballot applications, that the
number of ballot drop-off locations were dramatically increased and that
Democratic areas received more outside funding to increase voting access than
Republican areas.
‘How to
Challenge a Voter’
In 2022 and
2024, instead of untrained volunteers, the goal is for GOP recruits to have
undergone training and be equipped with new tools, according to Seifried.
Before
sharing a slide on “How to Challenge a Voter,” Seifried outlined a series of
scenarios under which recruits could contest voters or voting processes, though
he cautioned it is illegal to challenge every vote.
“You have
to have good reason to believe that an individual is not a citizen, that an
individual is not of legal voting age. If an individual does not live at the
location that they’re registered at, or if the person is not registered at
all,” he said during a March 2022 meeting.
This also
includes if a voter received an absentee ballot but is voting in person. He
also urged recruits to approach clerks, including attending “public accuracy”
meetings to question them about how voting machines work, recording machine
numbers, requesting copies of tabulator results before and after voting begins
and challenging clerks to prove their machines are not connected to the
internet.
When asked
about the strategy, an RNC spokesperson initially said recruits are not being
trained to challenge voters. The RNC later responded by citing a Michigan
election law excerpt that election workers “shall” challenge a voter if the
inspector “knows or has good reason to suspect” the voter is ineligible and
noted that a judge would ultimately review the case.
In an
October meeting, Seifried said priority targets are Detroit, Pontiac and
Southfield, which are heavily Democratic and minority areas. “Those are the
ones that we need to focus all our efforts on,” he said.
Grassroots
groups aligned with Trump are helping with recruitment. They include “Stand Up
Michigan,” whose members adapted the Village People’s hit “YMCA” to “MAGA,”
Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan. While the law stipulates election
inspectors must be trained by local clerks, candidates are also being coached
on things to look out for by operatives in RNC-sponsored workshops.
Chris
Thomas, who served for 36 years as elections director under one Democratic and
three Republican secretaries of state, said he’s spent time with Seifried, who
seems to be trying to be “above board” about his plans to create more equal
representation among poll workers.
“He claims
not to be a ‘Stop the Steal’ type but obviously all of the people he’s talking
to are,” said Thomas. ”They’re going to be all ginned up thinking they’re going
to see all kinds of stuff.”
“If
Seifried is honest with them,” he will tell them they won’t see much, added
Thomas. “There’s little to no history of election inspectors challenging
people” based on qualifications to vote, and if they create chaos, “that’s just
going to get them [the poll workers] thrown out.”
The
potential for conflict is clear. In a training in March, Seifried told recruits
to stand behind voter registration tables to “oversee the electronic poll book
to make sure the person that is coming in to vote is who they say they are.”
Voters should be challenged by alerting precinct chairs and then recruits
should call the RNC legal hotline or log the complaint in a website with a live
chat so “we can communicate with you real time.”
“Ideally,
you guys will all be the election inspector,” said Seifried. “You have so much
more authority because you’re the one that’s actually administering the
election.”
While
Seifried stressed challengers “cannot obstruct voting in any way” and not to be
“adversarial,” Thomas said it is wrong to suggest a first-time worker would be
in charge of a poll book and such workers have “no right to require inspectors
to toggle through” poll books.
The first
question in the Zoom chat: “How do we stop the counts if the person of
authority doesn’t respect the challenges made like at TCF in Detroit?” Another
asked what to do if someone is “clearly” using a fake I.D. to vote. Seifried
said to “try challenging it.”
The effort
has been underway for months, and GOP officials are planning to use Aug. 2
primary elections in Detroit as a dry run, according to Seifried.
“The early
hours on election day Aug. 2 will tell the story about whether this is a
legitimate operation or an attempt to slow the process to discourage voting,”
said Thomas.
Pressuring
the Detroit clerk
The
approach is proceeding as planned.
In an
interview, Winfrey, the Detroit elections clerk, confirmed that the RNC
delivered a list of more than 800 names in early May and that she is likely to
give “a good number” of the individuals roles as long as they attend training
sessions and are confirmed registered voters.
“Before
every election we always reach out to both the Democratic and Republican
parties to let them know we are recruiting poll workers” and “we get what we
get,” or mostly Democrats in a majority Democratic-voting city.
The list
comes nearly a year after Griffin, during a June, 2021 meeting, outlined how
GOP lawyers could corner Winfrey into either hiring their recruits or
establishing the basis for a lawsuit. “How do we build the proper evidence and
how do we build a trap for Janice Winfrey?” said Griffin.
When
informed of the tapes, Winfrey said she is “not shocked” and “not in any way
intimidated.”
“Apparently
they think I’m stupid,” she said. “Apparently they think I don’t follow the
law. I’m not surprised by their ignorance.”

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