This:
Hubbard County Auditor Kay Rave filed a complaint after she determined that she could not find completed registration forms among the ballots she received from Scouton’s jurisdiction.
This complaint led to an investigation by the Hubbard County Sheriff’s Office.
Eventually, another judge who worked with Scouton on election night came forward and told police that Scouton explicitly ordered voters to not fill out the Minnesota Voter Registration Application.
A third judge said that Scouton simply told new voters to sign the back of a book rather than fill out any official forms.
At least 11 people voted illegally as a result of Scouton’s actions.
This seems somewhat in line with the recent attempt in Bucks County Pennsylvania to count flawed ballots, against an explicit law:
But that didn’t stop Bucks County Commissioners Chair Diane Ellis-Marseglia. Not only did she and her fellow Democrat Bob Harvie vote to count the flawed ballots, she publicly acknowledged their decision was contrary to the law.
“I think we all know that precedent by a court doesn’t matter anymore in this country,” she said after the fact. “People violate laws any time they want. So for me, if I violate this law, it’s because I want a court to pay attention to it.”
A video of her admission made a hit on social media, garnering millions of views. Republicans claimed it confirmed their belief that Democrats are willing to manipulate the law to win elections. The fact that Ellis-Marseglia donated $600 to Casey’s campaign in September, and Casey had backed two Bucks County Democrats in previous elections, didn’t help.
Bucks County isn’t alone. Philadelphia, Centre, and Montgomery County Democrats are also defying both the state Supreme Court and Pennsylvania law by including mail ballots that have no date, or have the wrong date, in their county’s final count.
In both cases, there was defiance of the law that was relatively easy to see. How much goes on that’s difficult or impossible to see or to prove? That’s the problem; trust was broken when the laws were changed because some of the new laws were too lax. But trust is also broken when there is either the appearance or the fact of open defiance of laws. And after the fact, it’s often difficult or impossible to prove what happened and to know how it may have affected the results.
There was such a brouhaha about the Bucks Count Commisioners Chair’s statement that she’s issued this “apology”:
“The passion in my heart got the best of me and I apologize again for that,” Bucks County Commissioner Diane Ellis-Marseglia said in front of a fiery crowd at a county meeting.
“I made a mistake, and because I am an elected official, I am held to a far higher standard than everybody else. So, to the citizens I serve, I apologize, and I will continue to work hard for you and endeavor to not make such a mistake again.”
“The passion in my heart” – isn’t that great? She’s so passionate, you see. And no, you’re not held to a far higher standard. You’re held to the exact same standard: follow the law.
She should be fired or resign.
Also, here’s an informative video on the subject of voting fraud, then and now: