"I have 100% confidence that the November 2020 Presidential Election in Jackson County was conducted according to law and that the election was fair and accurate."
Christine Walker, Jackson County Clerk
Donald Trump said that elections that include mail-in voting are a "disaster." He called them "a whole big scam." He tweeted that it would be the "most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history." He said that if we got rid of mailed ballots there would be a peaceful continuation of power, because he would respect the voters' choice--because he would win.
Oregon runs elections exactly the way Trump said was the worst of the worst, with universal mail-in voting, with ballots sent automatically to all registered voters. The elections are administered by Oregon's counties under rules created by the Oregon legislature. Christine Walker is the Jackson County Clerk, an elected position. She was appointed to the position in 2008 and was elected in 2008, 2010, 2014, and 2018, and serves on a variety of professional boards and association relating to election supervision. Walker has partisan political roots as a Republican--her uncle was a Republican County Commissioner--but the office is now non-partisan. She was on the ground managing this election as she did prior ones, seeing whether or not there was a wave fake ballots, forged signatures, or electronic switching of votes.
Christine Walker stands by the election.
I have 100% confidence that the November 2020 Presidential Election in Jackson County was conducted according to law and that the election was fair and accurate. The County Clerk is the voice and will of the people through the election process and I do not take that responsibility lightly. We conduct elections in a transparent manner, allowing every qualified voter the ability to access/cast a ballot without barriers. We will continue to have an open dialogue with election officials, stakeholders and the public we serve as to provide greater confidence and dispel disinformation and misinformation pertaining to conducting elections around the country.
Walker addressed some of the areas where election skeptics have claimed fraud could take place. Ballots are returned by mail or into drop boxes.Could hundreds, perhaps thousands of fake ballots have been quietly added to the inflow? No. Every ballot that is returned comes in a bar-coded envelope with a signature attestation and every ballot that is mailed goes to a bar-coded voter and address. The county does not receive or accept anonymous ballots--only ballots that match the records and bar-codes of ballots printed and sent out by the county. There is no opportunity to "stuff" a ballot box.
Are signatures checked? “Yes. Every single signature is checked,” she said. They are checked by people at three different stages of experience. Some signatures are easy to match, based on the signature on file at registration plus the signatures from ballots from previous elections. Questionable ones go to a second team, again one that has access to previous signatures on file. A third team of highly experienced people examine ballots not resolved at the earlier levels.
About one percent of the 123,000 ballots cast here have questions and problems that require follow-up contact by the Election Department of the Clerk's office. Voters have a chance to remedy questionable signatures and identity, and if the ballots were legally cast before 8:00 p.m. on election day, per Oregon law the vote will be counted if the questions are resolved within two weeks. In the November, 2020 election 1,245 ballots required Clerk office contact with the voter, and 871 people did not successfully remedy the questions. Those votes were not counted. Walker said 334 ballots were mailed or dropped off with no signature on the ballot, and therefore required Clerk office contact. Of those, 204 did not successfully remedy by supplying a valid signature, and were not counted.
The Clerk's office reviewed and sent to the Secretary of State's office for further investigation and potential referral for prosecution 14 ballots, of which 4 were signed on behalf of people who were known to be deceased. Ten ballots were questioned as potential forgeries. A common forgery is for a ballot cast in the name of a voter, but signed by another household member. It is picked up because when there is a questionable signature the Clerk's office checks the signatures on file both for that person and for other household members, for which there may be multiple signatures on file from registration and previous elections. The style of signature sometimes better matches the household member than the person who voted. Signing someone else’s ballot is a felony.
Are the votes accurately tabulated? The counting machines are checked against a deck of ballots with a known vote count a week prior to the election, and again before the actual rally. Then, of course, there is an actual physical paper ballot available for hand count audit if necessary. Rarely, but sometimes, the ballot counting machines show a mis-count of a ballot, shorting a ballot. Walker said that voters sometimes leave sticky residue on ballots after having filled them out on a kitchen table and two ballots stick together when run through the machine. The counts are not accepted until there is one-for-one match between ballots known to be entered and final tally.
Is every registered voter a legal voter? Walker said that voters must be identified by driver's license, Social Security number, or other acceptable documents showing identity and residence at the time of registration, then votes are cast by people at a known address, signed under penalty of perjury. A non-citizen casting a ballot is not doing so secretly or anonymously. It is trackable back to a specific person at every stage, a huge risk to take for a serious felony offense.
I asked the status of the 14 ballots referred to the Secretary of State. Walker said she did not know the final disposition; the Oregon Secretary of State does those investigations. The Oregon Department of Justice performs the prosecutions. The Secretary of State's office is doing a status report now and says they will inform me in approximately one week.
Tomorrow: The Jackson County Election Department threatened after the November 2020 election:
"Vote Don't Work. Next time Bullets."