L'incubo costituzionale di un sistema di voto inaffidabile.
Lo leggano i sostenitori del voto elettronico.



<https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/oct/04/us-democracy-attack-midterms-election-constitutional-crisis-2024>

The 2022 midterm elections offer an inflection point unlike any America has 
seen before. Election deniers are on the verge of winning their campaigns for 
offices with oversight of elections. What happens in November will determine 
whether people who have spread lies about the 2020 election will be in charge 
of overseeing future contests.

This is why today the Guardian is launching The Fight for Democracy, a series 
focused on investigating the threats facing the democratic system in one of its 
supposed bastions. Building off an impactful series on US voting rights, it 
will scrutinize the movement to undermine election legitimacy, weaken voting 
rights and target election officials – a movement that ultimately seeks to 
codify a system of minority rule fundamentally opposed to the promise of a 
multiracial, multicultural, representative, constitutional democracy.

The county commission eventually voted 5-0 to ask Merlino to consider switching 
to hand-counting paper ballots. She resigned from her role shortly after and 
has since been replaced by Mark Kampf, a retired financial executive, who has 
falsely said Trump won the 2020 election. He is moving ahead with a plan to use 
hand-counted paper ballots in the election this fall.

Merlino doesn’t want anyone to fail in their job, but she said the change was 
concerning.

“Even though I’m conservative or whatever, I treat everybody the same. I’m a 
non-partisan when it comes to my office,” she said. “I think what’s eventually 
going to happen is you’re going to get people in office, good people, who feel 
that way, that they serve everybody, that don’t want to do it any more. So 
what’s going to happen is you’re going to get these people that are conspiracy 
theorists.”

Election deniers

A recent analysis by FiveThirtyEight estimated that 60% of Americans will have 
election deniers on the ballot in November.

The threat posed by individuals prepared to throw out legitimate election 
results is especially pronounced in the handful of key battleground states that 
were decisive in 2020.

That suggests a concerted effort to target roles with the goal of possibly 
overturning valid election results, a phenomenon that has come to be called 
election subversion. “It’s not just the number of election deniers who are 
running, worrying though that is. It’s the way these candidates have focused on 
the very positions that are most pivotal in determining the outcome of state 
and presidential elections,” said Jessica Marsden, a lawyer with Protect 
Democracy

Among the Republican candidates are four extreme election deniers running for 
governor in Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Doug Mastriano, 
competing in Pennsylvania, was a central figure behind the plot to send fake 
Trump electors to Congress on January 6 even though Biden won the state by 
80,000 votes.

There are also three extreme election deniers running for secretary of state – 
the top election administrator post – in Arizona, Michigan and Nevada. In 
Arizona, state representative Mark Finchem actively lobbied to overturn Biden’s 
victory and hand the state’s 11 electors to Trump; he has been involved with 
the far-right Oath Keepers militia and was at the Capitol on January 6. In 
Michigan, Kristina Karamo first came to prominence when she falsely claimed a 
miscount in Detroit based upon a basic misunderstanding of election procedures.

In Nevada, Marchant, who led the presentation in Nye county, is now the 
Republican nominee to be the state’s top election official.

Marchant, who is closely linked to the QAnon movement, is also leading a 
nationwide group of election deniers vying for secretary of state positions; 
should he win in November, he told the Guardian he plans to scrap all 
electronic voting machines and switch to paper-only counts.

Out-of-state funding

These candidates are being supported by a flood of money that’s unprecedented 
for secretary of state races, which have long drawn little attention.

In six states with competitive secretary of state races this year, candidates 
raised $16.3m overall as of the beginning of August, more than double the 
amount raised at the same point in 2018, according to the Brennan Center for 
Justice. Not accounting for incumbents, who have a significant fundraising 
advantage, election denier candidates have far outpaced those who have not 
questioned the election results.


Much of the money is coming from outside the states where the candidates are 
running. Patrick Byrne, the former Overstock.com CEO, who has been one of the 
most prolific financial backers of election denialism, has been a major donor. 
So has Richard Uihlein, a GOP mega-donor.

“In years past, a lot of people wouldn’t have been able to name their own 
secretary of state, never mind one of another state. So the idea that a 
candidate could raise a majority of their money, as some of these are, from out 
of state, is very surprising,” said Ian Vandewalker, senior counsel at the 
Brennan Center for Justice, who has been tracking funding in these races.

One of the most successful fundraisers has been Finchem, in Arizona, who had 
raised $1.2m in his race, 59% of which came from out-of-state donors. In 
Nevada, candidates have raised more than five times the amount of money raised 
at the comparable point in past cycles.

“To some extent, it’s the usual suspects. People who have been involved in 
election challenges, including to one degree or another, January 6, who are 
either directly supporting candidates or are spending in ways that help them or 
their message,” Vandewalker said. “At the same time, there clearly is some 
degree of a broad base of financial support for these candidates.”

Eyes and ears

There is a long US tradition of politicians alleging voter fraud, a specter 
that in recent years has been used to justify sweeping new voter restrictions, 
including polling place closures, aggressive voter purging and limits on 
mail-in voting.

Making matters worse, in 2013 the US supreme court gutted a key provision of 
the Voting Rights Act, a historic piece of legislation from the civil rights 
era that was supposed to ensure equal access to the polls. As a result, the 
legal system’s power to protect minority voters from unfair restrictions has 
been blunted.

The push to put election deniers in control of statewide elections has been 
complemented by an equally forceful push to exert more influence over election 
administration at the local level.

One part is an aggressive effort to recruit poll observers and poll workers to 
be eyes and ears in the polling place.

Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer who was closely linked to Trump’s effort to overturn 
the election, is playing a leading role. Working through the Conservative 
Partnership Institute, which is linked to Trump’s political apparatus, she’s 
held a series of events across the country encouraging people who doubt the 
2020 election results to sign up to be poll workers. The group encourages 
attendees to become embedded in their election offices and to become a 
“permanent presence” in every election office and to determine whether 
government officials are “friend or foe”.

A second part of this effort appears to involve putting as much pressure as 
possible on local election officials, making it harder for them to run 
elections and seeding the ground for more chaos. Since the 2020 election, 
election officials have faced an unprecedented wave of harassment and many are 
choosing to leave the field. Nearly one in five officials surveyed by the 
Brennan Center earlier this year said they were “very” or “somewhat likely” to 
leave the field by 2024.

After the 2020 election, we just had to put up with kind of a barrage of 
garbage. Every day a new conspiracy theory

Lynn Constabile

Already beefing up security in their office, election officials are now being 
swarmed with voluminous records requests related to the 2020 election, forcing 
them to reallocate resources to fulfill them that would otherwise be going 
towards getting ready to run the elections.

Lynn Constabile recently stepped down as the elections director in Yavapai 
county in Arizona after working there for nearly two decades. Trump handily won 
Yavapai county, but that didn’t stop false claims about the election from 
spreading.

“After the 2020 election, we just had to put up with kind of a barrage of 
garbage that came our way. Every day a new conspiracy theory – taking up time 
that I needed to plan the 2022 election. So probably around last fall I decided 
I really wasn’t being effective any more in my county,” she said.

“People would call us on the phone and yell at us. I’ve been called a 
communist. And you know, it gets old. We got a barrage of records requests. I 
would get 10-page records requests. Just threatening that if I didn’t fulfill 
it, they were gonna sue us. You’re trying to do your job but there’s not enough 
hours in the day,” she added.

She didn’t get explicit death threats, but she did get menacing messages that 
said things like “watch your back” and “you should be nervous”. She installed 
security cameras around her house – not something she thought she would ever 
have to do. It also became hard to find people to fill both full-time and 
seasonal jobs.

“The people that were applying, they didn’t really want to work for us, they 
wanted to watch us,” she said.

Perfect storm

The multiple pressures bearing down on US elections could come to a crunch when 
Americans choose their next president in 2024. “We face a perfect storm,” 
Darrell West, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and author of the 
new book Power Politics: Trump and the Assault on American Democracy, told the 
Guardian.

“There are restrictions on voting rights, a toxic information ecosystem, 
political violence – there’s lots of mischief that could take place.”

With Trump hinting strongly that he plans to run again, the conditions for 
West’s perfect storm are all too conceivable: Trump stands, Trump loses in the 
same swing states that defeated him in 2020, Trump launches a false “stolen 
election” plot 2.0.

Only this time the forces of subversion are far more organized, sophisticated 
and powerful. Which is one reason so much is at stake in the midterm elections 
in November.

At state level, should election deniers win governor or secretary of state 
positions they would be empowered to wreak havoc around the 2024 presidential 
election on a scale that will make Trump’s first “stolen election” effort look 
like a tea party.

Take Finchem in Arizona. He has already made several unsuccessful attempts to 
overturn Biden’s 2020 win by decertifying results in pockets of the state. As 
secretary of state, the top election administrator in Arizona, his fraudulent 
ploys would carry much more weight.


In Pennsylvania, Mastriano, should he manage to win his increasingly 
beleaguered campaign and become governor, would have the power to select the 
secretary of state who in turn would hold sway over how the count is conducted 
in critical parts of the commonwealth. The Finchems and Mastrianos would be 
well placed to throw out just enough votes on fake grounds of mass fraud to 
swing the result in their states to Trump.

“The way election subversion would most likely play out in 2024 is that the 
secretary of state would refuse to count a certain segment of votes, claiming 
they were tainted by fraud, and that would lead to a different slate of 
electors being sent to Congress,” Marsden said.

At that point, the crisis would switch to Congress itself. Here too the stakes 
couldn’t be higher in November.

Should the Republicans take control of the House of Representatives, elevating 
Kevin McCarthy, an avid backer of Trump’s stolen election lie, to the role of 
speaker, they would be in a strong position to accept the electors sent to 
Congress fraudulently by election deniers in the states.

Potentially the only person left who could stave off democratic disaster would 
be Kamala Harris, the vice-president, who under the US constitution will 
preside over certification just as Mike Pence did in 2020. But should she 
attempt to block the Republicans from certifying Trump as president on the back 
of fraudulent state actions, she could trigger a confrontation between the 
executive branch in the form of the vice-president and the legislative branch 
in Congress.

“It’s all about power now,” West said. “If you have power, you can use it to 
your own advantage – we’re seeing a lot of that in American politics these 
days.”

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