So how about that Harris County Election Administration meltdown, eh?
I've tweeted about the failures of this office all year, you can catch some of it here

And here texasscorecard.com/commentary/cra…
You should know how I spent election day.
I worked on the Rapid Response Team that @HarrisCountyRP set up to support election judges and respond to election issues of all types.

My role was to man the phones for tech help and dispatch team members to polls where needed.
The party had dozens of people on hand to record problems as they were reported in, but also to respond to them as we were able.

Judge didn't show? We dispatched one.
Clerks AWOL? We sent one over.
Had trouble with a machine? We talked judges through issues and solved them.
My team members fielded calls and texts from polling locations all day, while trying to get as much data as we could, documenting as many problems as we could.

If it went sideways somewhere, we heard about it.
Early in the day the calls were about locations that couldn't open on time. Codes to open the polls wouldn't work, or the keys weren't in the supplies to set up the voting machines, or was understaffed or unstaffed altogether.
Some locations could not get their machines properly hooked up and running. One of the busiest had only 10/50 voting machines working. Another had no functioning ballot box/scanner, so voters had nowhere to deposit their ballots except an emergency slot.
We learned that at one location - an elementary school in Baytown - the principal didn't open the gate so voters could enter. Another location had only 4/30 machines that worked.
Call after call, report after report, we tried to figure out ways to help.
Meanwhile, our judges kept telling us nobody was picking up the county phones. Wait times were reported to be as long as 45 minutes to 15 hours until a human responded.
In many cases our hands were tied.

Back in the primary we could pick up supplies, deliver ballot paper, offer tech support, help troubleshoot problematic machines. The party had the election authority over the primary, and could dispatch help easily. But...
In the general, all of the authority to handle these things was in the hands of the Elections Administrator.

To scores of judges, the only way we could help them was to try to email and call the EA office from the party HQ and hope to get to someone on those channels.
Based on the experiences or judges were reporting, using those channels didn't help solve those problems.

Here's just a sample of the reports that came across from my emails, texts, and calls:
* iPads for checking voters in weren't holding a charge
* voting machines set up before judge arrived to set them up
* machines still set with 'Early Voting' settings
* Voting booths not synching with controller machines
These problems weren't occurring in one or two locations.
They were happening ALL OVER THE COUNTY.
ALL DAY.

And then the ballot paper problem began.
I think the first I became aware of it was around 1 pm, when a few judge friends called me to tell me they believed they would run out of ballot paper.

It killed me to tell them that we didn't have the ability to get paper to them, and that they had to keep calling the EA.
We kept hearing this, and heard that the EA was telling judges that there was no way they were running out of ballot paper, because they knew how many people were voting.

Who are you going to believe, us, or your lying eyes?
But it seems the EA failed to calculate just how many voters would be using these machines for the first time.

And just how many ballots would need to be spoiled due to paper jams in the voting machines.
Some judges called over and over, beginning at 9 am, to try to make sure they had sufficient ballot paper to finish the day. Some of them reported the dwindling number of pages they had left each time they called.
And then one location ran out of ballot paper completely in the early afternoon. And then another.

Eventually the party had to put this out:
During all this, the EA must have been planning to try to keep the polls open later, because all of a sudden, we heard there was an order in place to extend voting until 8 pm.
When voting hours are extended by a judge here, the votes for that extended time period are supposed to be cast provisionally.

But of cours we started hearing from our judges that there was a shortage of provisional forms at many locations.
The only thing a judge could do if they ran out of provisional ballots was to ask voters to wait until they were resupplied by the EA if they wanted to vote.

And if people were in line by 8 pm under that order, that location had to stay open until each voter in line voted.
So during the extended hours, guess what happened!

Paper ballot deliveries started being reported.

3000 at one location.
4000 at another location.
2000 at a third.

Judges would say 'I don't need all this, but four other locations nearby do, are you going there too?
'I only have four stops on my list. My next stop is 20 miles away.' said one driver.

This was happening after 7 pm. One location reported his long-awaited ballot paper request, one he had begun calling about at lunchtime, was fulfilled at 7:45.
Another judge received his ballot paper at 9:05. Only 4 voters were in line at that point.

By that time, the EA knew that the order to keep the polls open had been stayed by the Texas Supreme Court.
There are so many more incidents highlighting the countless failures of the EA's office.

I went back and looked at some of my tweets in the spring about Isabel Longoria, and how bad at this job she was.

I had no concept of just how much worse it could get.
This was the first large federal election using the new voting machines.

The EA's office has been working with these machines since May of 2021. All the problems with the system they have known about since then should have been solved long ago.
The technical issues with the machines themselves could be due to a lack of maintenance, or improper care and calibration. Some reporter should start trying to find out how these machines are maintained and tested.
They knew the machines were jamming easily. Did they see if other counties around the country that use them have the same problems?

It's hard to believe it's the technology at fault if the same machines work better in other locations. Have we checked that?
We should demand to know if these machines are being maintained properly.
We should know why every election they continue to have problem after problem.
This is one of the largest counties in the country, hosting some of the most expensive elections.
It isn't just the tech that is costing massive amounts of money, though.

The EA's office is a massive jobs program. I'd love to see what non-judge/clerk payroll looks like. So much money spent on people who don't work the polls, but they run out of change of address forms?
They have budget for students to run around NRG and toss ballot bags into piles without checking for seals, but not enough money to provide adequate ballot paper to nearly 800 polling locations in a federal election.
I'm disgusted at the politics behind all this.

We're stuck with another unelected Elections Administrator who continues what the first one started: undermining the confidence of voters in this county in their elections.
Maybe it IS time for the legislature to get involved. The Harris County Elections Administration has proven that they cannot be trusted to manage our elections.

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More from @somethingfishie

Apr 3
We need to talk about this nonsense, right now. Pull up a chair.
Let me tell you about staffing elections in Harris county.

For most locations, you need a minimum of about 5 people, two judges and three clerks. The county typically staffs a location with 6 people, so we'll use that to extrapolate.
I did this math before, but we'll go over it again. In Harris County:

Election judges get paid $20/hr.
Alternate judges and clerks get paid $17/hr.
Both are eligible for overtime pay.
Read 37 tweets
Mar 7
Alan Vera, Chair of Ballot Security Committee for @HarrisCountyRP on whethr the Election Administrator's failure is due to incompetence or something worse:

"At what point does election incompetence become the perfect camoflage for election malfeasance?"
The wrong-sized ballot paper was delivered to some election judges.

Other judges weren't issued ANY ballot paper.

Some judges received broken election equipment.

Some never had their equipment delivered at all.

Most of these were Republican judges, Alan says.
Judges who were issued the wrong sized paper didn't know the paper was the wrong size, because they'd never had legal size paper before.

Voters who voted on the short paper ballots had up to FIFTEEN RACES CUT OFF. Those included the County Judge and County Commissioner races.
Read 17 tweets
Mar 2
It's the day after the Texas Primaries, and while we wait for the Harris County results (long story you can read about elsewhere) I want to put down some of my experiences.

I've posted about voters overcoming many personal and techical obstacles. Now some of what we faced.
First, Harris County removed election authority from the elected County Clerk a few years ago, and created an appointed Election Administrator, answerable to Commisioners Court.

As you can guess, a crony payoff position waiting to happen.
I'm not making that accusation, as much as saying it's a bad idea to make your elections authority an appointed position, no matter who holds the office. There has to be accountability, and I'm more comfortable with that coming directly from voters.
Read 36 tweets
Nov 5, 2020
When we check in a voter in Harris county, we scan their ID or perform a simple database search to pull up their unique voter ID.

If there are notes, like say someone needs to update their address, we see that and can help them do that before proceeding.
When a person has applied for a mail ballot, the system has a note there to that effect so that we'll see it if they show up in person.

We're supposed to have them fill out a mail ballot cancellation form and update the system so that it gets canceled right away.
I don't know for sure because I just started working early voting this year, but I understood that the voters weren't previously required to surrender the ballots during early voting. On election day, yes, but during early voting ballots can be slow to arrive in the mail.
Read 60 tweets
Oct 22, 2020
I've worked 8 days now out of my 17 early voting day schedule as an election judge in Harris county.

Most of those days I worked 6 am to 7:30 pm, with a half hour for lunch.

It's long days and paperwork and staff management and voter assistance.

And sometimes a joy.
The neatest thing is the number of stories I get to witness, the small slices of life I get to observe.

For instance, each time the team discovers a first-time voter, they announce it to the whole room, and everyone cheers and claps.

I often tear up at that.
Every location in Harris is required to have staff fluent in Spanish, Vietnamese, and Chinese, so I've spent a lot of time getting to know our language specialist clerks.

They have been busy all week.
Read 20 tweets
Sep 25, 2020
It's funny how 'fact-checkers' keep making themselves LESS trustworthy every day, and then are so confused as to why people don't pay attention to them.

The other day I posted in several places on Facebook the U-Haul van footage from Louisville. 1/
Here's what the post looked like. This is exactly the wording I used. 2/
Today I find a series of messages from Facebook:

'Independent fact-checkers at PolitiFact say information in your post is missing context and could mislead people. We've added a notice to your post."
Read 16 tweets

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