The prime example of everything weird and unsettling about the ongoing attack on democratic norms is currently taking place in Arizona. For the past several weeks, far-right conspiracy theorists have posted themselves near ballot drop boxes in Maricopa County. Two armed individuals keeping an eye on the boxes prompted a police intervention and earned themselves referrals for criminal investigation.
Let me say this at the top: Election monitors are good. It is to everyone’s benefit that there are citizens willing to keep an eye out for shenanigans and dirty tricks while their neighbors are trying to vote. In an ideal world, the job of an election monitor is to ensure that everyone who comes to a precinct — or casts a ballot in a drop box — is afforded equal protection under the law.
MAGA Republicans and their supporters are using the same tactics that a real election observer should safeguard against.
That job includes watching out for the (very, very rare) cases of voter fraud, while also protecting voters from being intimidated or unfairly turned away from the polls. But in Maricopa County and elsewhere, MAGA Republicans and their supporters are using the same tactics that a real election observer should safeguard against, in their latest perversion of public service.
The Department of Justice on Monday filed a “statement of interest” in an election lawsuit in Arizona, saying that the “vigilante ballot security measures” on display there likely violate the Voting Rights Act. “When private citizens form ‘ballot security forces’ and attempt to take over the State’s legitimate role of overseeing and policing elections, the risk of voter intimidation — and violating federal law — is significant,” the DOJ wrote in its filing.
Defenders of the practice might say it’s to intimidate would-be cheaters. But due to the layers of checks that happen after the ballots are collected, “there’s simply no legitimate or useful election integrity function served by watching drop boxes or photographing voters,” Matt Blaze, a Georgetown University law professor who researches methods to secure systems, explained.
This means it doesn’t matter how the ballot got there or who put it in the box. The authentication process, which mirrors checking in a voter at a physical polling place, ensures that the ballot is valid, that it came from a registered voter, and that no one votes more than once.
— matt blaze (@mattblaze) October 28, 2022
A federal judge agreed on Tuesday, issuing a temporary restraining order against Clean Elections USA, a group that has been organizing the drop box-watching campaign in Arizona’s Maricopa County. That injunction — which also extends to people and groups working with Clean Elections USA — bans the self-appointed monitors from taking pictures and videos of voters dropping off ballots, as well as barring participants from opening carrying firearms and posting information about voters online.
That a group of armed goons standing around a ballot box is intimidating is a no-brainer. What’s less easy to parse out is how their more official counterparts will affect voting patterns this year. On the one hand, you have the outright partisan observers implementing the “flood the zone with s—” methods that federal convict Steve Bannon has championed. That includes both partisan groups who are drowning election officials in bogus challenges and the Republican Party-trained poll workers being deployed to challenge voters at polling places in Democratic-leaning precincts.








