Nothing ensures accurate vote counting like a man with a .45 caliber semiautomatic pistol.
Despite making some people uncomfortable at the Clark County, Washington, auditor’s office during last month’s primary, Gerald “Rick” Halle — and anyone else who wants to — will still be permitted to carry firearms into the county’s elections office.
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According to The Columbian, there were no altercations with Halle, tasked by the county Republican party with overseeing the vote tallying process. No one even said a word to him about the weapon, fastened securely to his hip as it is every day. But afterwards, some elections workers said it wasn’t the right place for a gun.
Having a partisan person “standing behind you, holding a gun,” could easily be disruptive or intimidating, Lee Jensen, another election observer, told The Columbian. Nevertheless, the law trumps queasiness.









