A county in Washington State has refused to allow election observers to monitor the election process unless they wear COVID-19 masks despite the state repealing mask mandates over two years ago. Officials in Island County, Washington, are reportedly demanding observers wear masks. Auditor Sheilah Crider refused to let observers in after claiming that half of the staff were COVID-19 positive in August.
Despite her claims, Crider has allegedly been unable to prove to local reporters that the election office was the source of the COVID-19 infections.
Earlier this week, Island County Republicans sent a cease-and-desist letter to the Auditor calling for Crider to end the mask mandate, which they have claimed is illegal. Mask mandates were largely ended in Washington state in March 2022 except in select locations, such as long-term care homes and healthcare. But those mandates were also rescinded the following year, in 2023.
ELECTION INTEGRITY.
Election integrity remains one of the most important issues ahead of next week’s presidential election, making observers especially important. Hundreds of election officials sounded the alarm over election integrity in several key swing states, including concerns about ballot counting and chain of custody of votes.
Despite the concerns, anti-Trump officials like Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger have raised millions of dollars to thwart attempts to bolster election integrity efforts.
Democrats have also sued to halt election integrity efforts in Georgia. In August, both the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the Georgia Democratic Party announced a lawsuit to halt a ruling requiring the total number of votes cast to match those counted before election results are certified.