Arresting Impartial Observers?

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In summary: The Republicans tend to be xenophobic and have the attitude that the US rules (or at least, SHOULD rule) and that every other country sucks eggs.I would expect them to be quite unfriendly to any such monitors.I don't believe the state has the power to prosecute any foreign citizen. I think that's a federal power only.Republicans tend to be xenophobic and have the attitude that the US rules (or at least, SHOULD rule) and that every other country sucks eggs. So what are these farn fag eggsuckers doin' messing with our 'lections, which are the BEST IN THE WORLD?
  • #1
SixNein
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Greg Abbott, the Republican Attorney General of Texas, issued a stern warning this week to members of an international delegation expected to be on hand to monitor voting at polling places around the country on Election Day.

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"It may be a criminal offense for OSCE's representatives to maintain a presence within 100 feet of a polling place's entrance," he writes. "Failure to comply with these requirements could subject the OSCE's representatives to criminal prosecution for violating state law."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/...ions_n_2010081.html?ncid=edlinkusaolp00000009

your thoughts?
 
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  • #2
SixNein said:

I would believe that it is against the law. Surely such laws weren't intended for the purpose of shutting down oversight, but the law's the law.

Republicans tend to be xenophobic and have the attitude that the US rules (or at least, SHOULD rule) and that every other country sucks eggs. So what are these farn fag eggsuckers doin' messing with our 'lections, which are the BEST IN THE WORLD? The nerve of them eggsuckers. I would expect them to be quite unfriendly to any such monitors. I would expect his attitude to be popular in Texas.
 
  • #4
What right does the UN have to over see any of our political functions?

Granted if it were up to me one of the budget holes I would close is the UN so I am not impartial either.
 
  • #5
It's against the law for ANYBODY to loiter within 100 feet of polling places where I'm from. I don't see what the big deal is.
 
  • #6
I don't like people looking at me so I should issue arrests warrants.
 
  • #7
I bet he expects them to obey posted speed limits as well the gall of imposing laws on UN international delegates who do not have diplomatic immunity.
 
  • #8
There is nothing intelligent about his remarks IMO.
 
  • #9
I don't believe the state has the power to prosecute any foreign citizen. I think that's a federal power only.
 
  • #10
UN election observers?

Maybe they'll draw observers from the UN Human Rights Council, whose members include Cuba, China, Saudia Arabia and Libya. Syria had applied for a seat this year, though Assad may have been too busy lately to finish the paper work.
 
  • #11
Angry Citizen said:
I don't believe the state has the power to prosecute any foreign citizen. I think that's a federal power only.
I doubt all of these observers have diplomatic immunity which is granted by the federal government. Otherwise there are many foreign nationals sitting in state prison that want a lawyer ASAP.
 
  • #12
mheslep said:
UN election observers?

Maybe they'll draw observers from the UN Human Rights Council, whose members include Cuba, China, Saudia Arabia and Libya. Syria had applied for a seat this year, though Assad may have been too busy lately to finish the paper work.

http://www.un.org/wcm/content/site/undpa/main/issues/elections/actors
 
  • #13
rootX said:
http://www.un.org/wcm/content/site/undpa/main/issues/elections/actors
"Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights"

So same bunch, in part.
 
  • #16
As it happens, OSCE has now conceded that they don't need to actually be in the polling places and that they will abide by Texas laws, so this whole thing is moot now.
 
  • #18
Vanadium 50 said:
As it happens, OSCE has now conceded that they don't need to actually be in the polling places and that they will abide by Texas laws, so this whole thing is moot now.
It was never a question about if OSCE will abide by local laws but the thread and the OP article is about how welcoming Greg Abbott is to having an external organization monitoring the election process. From the OP article:
Abbott's opposition is consistent with a growing trend of conservative distrust toward the United Nations and other international organizations
It's no wonder that the world doesn't cheer much on the US conservatives:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-20008687
 
Last edited:
  • #19
It seems that Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott was mistaken from the beginning.

Daan Everts, the OSCE ambassador who received a skeptical letter from Abbott this week that set off a war of words to which even the U.S. State Department had to respond, told The Associated Press his monitors don't need to be inside polling places to observe the Nov. 6 election.

OSCE observers generally are members of parliament from organization member countries, which include the United States and 55 countries in Europe and Central Asia. The group has sent observers to poll locations across the U.S. since 2002 and stationed some in San Antonio in 2008.

Abbott wrote Everts on Tuesday saying he was unclear about OSCE's intentions in Texas and raised concerns about the group's meetings with opponents of voter ID initiatives. He said international groups "are not allowed to influence or interfere" with Texas elections and warned that monitors faced prosecution if they came within 100 feet of polling sites.

Everts, head of OSCE's long-term election observer mission, said the group is nonpartisan, comes down on no side of the voter ID debate and that U.S. elections are secure enough to where his monitors don't need to join registered and authorized poll watchers already inside.

"He should be better informed," Everts said of Abbott.

A spokeswoman for Abbott did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. On Thursday, Abbott tweeted "BRING IT" after another OSCE ambassador wrote a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton calling Abbott's warnings of arrest "unacceptable."
How embarrassing, we have Texas politicians that have no clue what is going on. The OSCE has been doing this in the US since 2002!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20121026/us-texas-election-standoff/
 
  • #20
Evo said:
How embarrassing, we have Texas politicians that have no clue what is going on...

Oh, right, you don't live here. Move along now, nothing to see here. Everything is situation normal.
 
  • #21
jhae2.718 said:
Oh, right, you don't live here. Move along now, nothing to see here. Everything is situation normal.
:biggrin: SNORK!
 
  • #22
Angry Citizen said:
I don't believe the state has the power to prosecute any foreign citizen. I think that's a federal power only.

Not true. Federal crimes are handled in Federal Court. State and local crimes are prosecuted in state and local courts.
 
  • #23
Evo said:
It seems that Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott was mistaken from the beginning.

Mistaken about what? OSCE has said that it will station poll watchers in polling stations. When confronted with Texas State law it changed tactics to not actually being present to observe the election. This is an obvious change to what they had intended to do. The OSCE Election Observation Handbook specifically states how elections are to be observed.
Responsibilities for observing election-day activities are shared among the core team, LTOs,and STOs. Among these, however, STOs are the mission’s primary resource for observing and assessing election-day procedures at polling stations and at intermediate levels of the election administration. STOs are deployed around the country on election day, in international teams of two, to observe polling stations and counting centres.
Election-day observation can be a very individual experience, depending on the area of
deployment and the set of circumstances confronted by each observer team in the polling
stations they visit. Some observers may encounter significant problems, others may find no
problems, and still others may see a mixed picture. The ODIHR election observation methodology, which provides for a contribution by each observer team, is designed to achieve an overall picture of election-day proceedings. Observers fill in forms at each polling station and counting centre visited, which provides detailed information on the voting and counting process, and which in turn provides the election observation mission with an overall profile of polling-station activity throughout the country, upon which it can draw conclusions based upon a collective experience.
The ODIHR methodology for election-day observation is therefore both qualitative and quantitative.
Completing the forms in polling stations provides a basis for a countrywide statistical
analysis of the implementation of key election-day procedures. While there is a standard
form designed as a checklist for procedures in polling stations and counting centres, forms
do vary depending on country-specific procedures (see Annex B for a sample form). The
forms ensure that all important aspects of the election-day process are properly focused
on and reported and that key tendencies are identified correctly. The EOM statistical analyst
prepares a quantitative analysis of the results of observation.
In addition to filling out forms, STOs are asked to provide comments on noteworthy observations or impressions, both on their forms and in oral debriefings. They may sometimes be asked to prepare separate written reports on particular incidents or observations. Careful
commentary from STOs can be particularly important in establishing whether specific election-day violations took place and in discerning trends within the country or in particular
You can't observe and gather "detailed information on the voting and counting process" without being present in the polling station, a requirement noted as late as last Friday by the OSCE in a statement that
...monitors could not stay 100 feet away from polling stations in order to observe and evaluate things like ballot secrecy and the voting process. Thomas Rymer said OSCE was in touch with the State Department and hoped the situation would be resolved before the election.
http://www.usnews.com/news/politics...s-ag-ramps-up-dispute-with-election-observers

Elsewhere in the OSCE operation manual it refers many times to being inside the polling station to observe and count blank forms, empty ballot boxes, interviewing polling station officials, and so forth. My favorite section is the section dealing with interviewing polling station officials.
How were polling-station officials selected? Do they represent political parties? What is their usual employment?
Are all appointed members present? Have any members been prevented from serving
on the polling-station commission?
How are the duties of the polling-station commission divided to provide for efficient and
secure processing of voters?
Did polling-station officials receive formal training?
When were the ballots and other voting materials received, and how were they secured
prior to election day?
How many ballots were initially received by the polling station in question?
Are there sufficient ballots and other polling materials?
We are supposed to believe this doesn't constitute interference?

Evo said:
How embarrassing, we have Texas politicians that have no clue what is going on. The OSCE has been doing this in the US since 2002!

Some states allow outside observers in polling places as state laws vary in this respect. If Texas State law was broken in 2008 by OSCE, that does not grant them the right to do so again.

Texas State election law mandates that all poll watchers be a registered voter of the county if the election is countywide; of that part of the county in which the election is held if the election is less than countywide; or of a political subdivision in which the election is held. [Sec. 33.031]. There is no provision that allows a foreigner to qualify as a poll watcher.
 
  • #24
chemisttree said:
Some states allow outside observers in polling places as state laws vary in this respect. If Texas State law was broken in 2008 by OSCE, that does not grant them the right to do so again.
I am not aware that the OSCE broke texas law in 2008, can you please post that link? I apologize if someone already posted the article about them being found guilty of this and the outcome.
 
  • #25
Evo said:
I am not aware that the OSCE broke texas law in 2008, can you please post that link? I apologize if someone already posted the article about them being found guilty of this and the outcome.

I am not aware tha the OSCE broke Texas law in 2008 either, they only say they were present in San Antonio during the 2008 election. But if they did, it doesn't grant them the right to do it again. You will note that OSCE wrote a letter to the State Department asking that Federal officials ensure that they are not restrained in their activities in Texas. OSCE asked our Federal Government to overrule Texas state law.

Perhaps this was a result of them not being able to directly oversee the voting process in 2008 and 2010? The Final Report notes that, "OSCE/ODIHR LEOM observers could not follow election day proceedings in Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Ohio and Texas because laws in these states do not allow access for non-party observers to polling stations." Actually they weren't allowed for other reasons in the state of Texas which had more to do with the fact that they weren't registered voters. Interesting they would put a partisan spin on the rationale. We do know that OSCE has lobbied repeatedly to change their access to polling locations in states like Texas where they are forbidden to observe by law. From their 2010 mid term election report:
In keeping with its OSCE commitments, the US has regularly invited the OSCE/ODIHR to observe federal elections. However, despite repeated OSCE/ODIHR recommendations, US
federal law does not provide minimum standards for access of observers to US elections.
State laws vary significantly with regard to observation, resulting in uneven, and at times,
restricted access for international observers.

So we know what they really want now, don't we?
 
  • #26
chemisttree said:
So we know what they really want now, don't we?
Apparently, they want to be impartial observers.
 
  • #27
Evo said:
Apparently, they want to be impartial observers.

ACLU and other groups are requesting impartial observers due to some of the activities as of late on voting.
 

1. What is the purpose of arresting impartial observers?

The purpose of arresting impartial observers is to prevent them from being able to give unbiased or neutral observations about a particular situation or event. This is often done by governments or organizations in order to control the narrative or information being shared.

2. How is the impartiality of an observer determined?

The impartiality of an observer is determined by their ability to remain unbiased and objective in their observations. This means that they do not have any personal stake or bias in the situation and are able to provide a neutral perspective.

3. What are the consequences of arresting impartial observers?

The consequences of arresting impartial observers can vary depending on the situation and the country or organization involved. In some cases, it can lead to a lack of accurate information and a one-sided narrative being presented. It can also be seen as a violation of human rights and freedom of speech.

4. How does arresting impartial observers affect the scientific community?

Arresting impartial observers can have a negative impact on the scientific community as it restricts the flow of accurate and unbiased information. This can hinder the progress of research and the dissemination of knowledge. It can also create an environment of fear and censorship, which goes against the principles of scientific inquiry.

5. What can be done to protect impartial observers from being arrested?

One way to protect impartial observers is to ensure that there are laws and regulations in place to protect freedom of speech and the right to gather information. It is also important for individuals and organizations to advocate for the protection of impartial observers and to raise awareness about the importance of unbiased observations in society.

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