

Election officials are under attack and leaving their jobs. They need help.

By Michael Waldman, J.D.
President
Brennan Center for Justice
The public servants who run our elecยญtions are alarmed.
Between Januยญary 31 and Februยญary 14, we had the Benenยญson Strategy Group poll nearly 600 local elecยญtion offiยญcials about their jobs. Their responses should set off warnยญing bells across all levels of governยญment and provoke action from Congress.
More than half of the respondยญents said theyโre concerned about the safety of their colleagues. Nearly one in three know at least one colleague who quit their job in part or entirely because of safety concerns, increased threats, or intimยญidยญaยญtion. And of those who have been threatened, more than half have experยญiยญenced it up close and personal.
Why is this happenยญing? Well, the Big Lie, of course. Nearly two in three local elecยญtion offiยญcials we polled said that false informยญaยญtion about elecยญtions makes their jobs more dangerยญous. Ninety-five percent blame social media companยญies for allowยญing their platยญforms to peddle outright lies and conspirยญacy theorยญies.
It shouldยญnโt come as a surprise why these public servants are lookยญing over their shoulders when you hear some of their storยญies.
Racist harassยญment. Death threats. Private personal informยญaยญtion released online. In one frightยญenยญing story from Georยญgia, someone showed up at the door of an elecยญtion worker to make a โcitizenโs arrest.โ But the elecยญtion worker didnโt live there anymore. It was her grandยญmotherโs place, and her grandยญmother was underยญstandยญably terriยญfied. Incidยญents like these have even led some elecยญtion offiยญcials to flee their homes for safety. For a more visceral taste of what elecยญtion offiยญcials have faced since the 2020 elecยญtion, watch our video on it:
But elecยญtion offiยญcials also warned of another threat as we charge full steam ahead toward Novemยญberโs midterms and then on to the 2024 presยญidยญenยญtial elecยญtion: politยญical interยญferยญence.
Nearly one in five respondยญents worry they will face presยญsure to certify elecยญtion results in favor of a specific candidยญate or party. These politยญical attacks are taking their toll. Twenty percent of those polled plan on leavยญing their jobs before the 2024 elecยญtion. Of those, a third cite politยญical leadยญersโ dishonยญest attacks on the legitยญimยญacy of our elecยญtion systems as one of the top reasยญons.
Despite the hardยญships they face, most elecยญtion offiยญcials enjoy their jobs, explainยญing they took the job to serve their communitยญies and make sure our elecยญtions run smoothly and fairly. And if we want these honest public offiยญcials to stay in their jobs, they need help from Washยญingยญton, DC. More than three out of four elecยญtion offiยญcials believe the federal governยญment should be doing more to support them.
Itโs time for Congress to take these threats against the people who run our elecยญtions seriยญously and protect them against the violยญent conspirยญacy theorยญists and partisยญans who continue to underยญmine the legitยญimยญacy of our elecยญtion systems.
There are many ways to do this. Members of Congress can set aside funds that can be used for things like home and office securยญity for elecยญtion workยญers. They should also make it a crime to intimยญidยญate elecยญtion workยญers for the purpose of interยญferยญing with the vote tabuยญlaยญtion process. And finally, they should make it a crime to โdoxโ elecยญtion workยญers, or reveal their personal informยญaยญtion, with the intent to threaten or intimยญidยญate them.
Itโs the least Congress can do for these unsung heroes of our demoยญcracy who are under very real attack.
Originally published by the Brennan Center for Justice, 03.15.2022, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivs-NonCommercial license.


