Topic: OSCE Rights Group Requests International Observers
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Tue 08/23/16 08:50 AM
Edited by SassyEuro2 on Tue 08/23/16 08:50 AM
OSCE rights group requests 500 international observers to monitor U.S. presidential vote

http://uk.mobile.reuters.com/article/idUKKCN10Y08Z/

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe aims to send 500 international observers to observe November's U.S. presidential election, a tenfold increase from the number the group deployed in 2012.

A coalition of more than 200 U.S. civil rights groups urged the OSCE in a letter released on Tuesday to provide even more than the 500 observers the OSCE requested based on an assessment it conducted in May. The actual observers will be dispatched by the international security and rights organization's 57 participating states.

The letter from the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights said the OSCE's role was "even more critical" in light of the U.S. Justice Department's July announcement, first reported by Reuters, that it would deploy election observers to far fewer polling sites this year than in previous elections.

Civil rights advocates say voters are more likely to face racial bias at the polls in November than they have in 50 years, because of voting laws that several states passed after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down part of the landmark anti-discrimination 1965 Voting Rights Act three years ago.

Supporters of the laws say they are necessary to combat voter fraud.

Earlier this month, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump made his own plea for election observers before an audience in Pennsylvania and said the only way he could lose the state would be if "in certain sections of the state they cheat."

Wade Henderson, president and chief executive of the Leadership Conference, told Reuters that international observers could not fill the void left by Justice Department-deployed observers, who numbered 840 in 2004, the last election for which the department provided numbers for federal observers.

"We profess to bring democracy to various parts of the world where we monitor elections, but then our own country is embarrassed by its failure to ensure adequate elections here at home," said Henderson.

OSCE spokesman Thomas Rymer said the number of observers the group hoped to deploy to the United States was fixed at 500 but that the Leadership Conference letter would factor into the group's decision about where to send the observers.

The letter urged the OSCE to focus its resources on eight states in which it said "enhanced voter intimidation efforts" were likely, including Pennsylvania and North Carolina, where the Nov. 8 contest between Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton is expected to be close.


Conrad_73's photo
Tue 08/23/16 10:15 AM
Edited by Conrad_73 on Tue 08/23/16 10:16 AM
noway noway noway
Why doesn't the EU tend to its own Crap?

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Tue 08/23/16 03:28 PM
It truely is infuriating. :angry:

I don't care, the word 'observing', is used.
We send 'observers', to Russia.
And they always ask to come.
And there is always, a stink over it.
And a flat out "NO"
(Thread on that).

Now..  this!

I am sure most of these morons, don't realize they are voluntarily, giving up OUR nation' s sovereignty.

OUTSIDE interference is the the last thing we need...  especially for elections of the presidency & commander & chief.

Agenda, agenda , agenda.... " Oh help us, we are incapable Ma Merkel & UN , tell us how to be like you... we are so ignorant & forgot who we are & how far we have come & we want to stop being an independent country & be a 'state ' & suffer too " frustrated


Geez... Call a cop. Call the national guard.
Big a*s babies!
Rant over rant

Conrad_73's photo
Wed 08/24/16 12:59 AM
2012 Texas controversy
Before the U.S. presidential elections of November 2012, the OSCE announced its intention to send electoral observers to Texas and to other U.S. states. In response, Greg Abbott, the Attorney General of Texas, sent letters to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton threatening to arrest OSCE officials if they should enter electoral premises in Texas and break Texas law,[40] and to the OSCE.[41] In response, the U.S. Department of State indicated that OSCE observers enjoyed immunities.[42] However no incidents between OSCE and Texas authorities were recorded during the elections.WIKI

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organization_for_Security_and_Co-operation_in_Europe