AUGUSTA – The Maine Legislature's Veterans and Legal Affairs committee has voted to support bills to strengthen protections for all election workers, election ballots, and election infrastructure.
Committee members voted unanimously in favor of an amended version of L.D. 1821, "An Act To Make Interfering with an Election Official a Class C Crime," proposed by Rep. Bruce White of Waterville, which will strengthen election worker protections by adding threatening an election official to election law as a Class D crime, as well as adding a reporting procedure for any threats election officials receive. Additionally, the Maine Secretary of State will provide town and city clerks and registrar with crisis de-escalation training.
Committee members voted 7-5 in favor of L.D. 1779, An Act To
Protect Election Integrity by Regulating Possession of Ballots and Voting
Machines and Devices, from Rep. Teresa Pierce of Falmouth, which will clarify
the chain of custody for both ballots and voting machines to ensure there is
certainty regarding who may legally possess them thus preventing the type of
issues which occurred in Arizona and Colorado after the 2020 election where
voting machines and ballots were turned over to unauthorized individuals with
partisan agendas.
Protecting Maines elections from interference and subversion,
either through election worker intimidation or outside political interference,
is paramount, said Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows.
She said when our town and city clerks are threatened, or
ballots and equipment compromised, our democracy itself is threatened.
“I have had the pleasure of volunteering at elections in my
hometown on a number of occasions,” said Rep. White. Our Waterville election
workers are dedicated individuals, as are all election workers across the
state. They are nonpartisan and voluntarily work long hours to support the
democratic process. I am grateful the committee supported my bill to provide
adequate protection to those who work to ensure all of us can cast a ballot on
Election Day.”
Pierce agrees with that assessment.
“Maine voters deserve to know we are doing everything we can
to protect their votes,” said Rep. Pierce. “We are fortunate to have top-notch
elections officials and a very secure voting system, but other states have recently
seen issues that have risked the security of their voting systems and
elections. We can’t let that happen here. This measure will help us prevent
those types of issues by safeguarding against interference with ballots and
voting equipment.”
In the last year there has been a dramatic increase in
documented threats against election officials in America.
In July, the FBI announced a new law enforcement task force to
deal with threats against election workers. In December, a national news
organization, Reuters, conducted a nationwide investigation and identified 850
messages that met the level of threat that is a violation of federal law,
including death threats.
Here in Maine, the Secretary of State’s office received
documented reports of at least two threats of physical violence against
municipal clerks.
Both bills will next go to the Legislature for further votes.
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