There's a Major Update on the Power of Local Law Enforcement and Deportations
Trump Turns the Microphone Over to Hurricane Helene Victims
Congress Launches New Investigations Into Debanking
Yes, Debanking Is Real
RINO Thom Tillis Plans to Sink Pete Hegseth’s Confirmation
Wait, That's How Long LA Knew About Their Shoddy Water Systems?
No, We Don't Need to Extend the Presidency to Three Terms for Trump
Thomas Massie Introduces Measure That Would Be a Game Changer for Gun Rights
Media Complains They Are Already 'Exhausted' Over Covering Trump – Five Days...
Mike Johnson Vows to Investigate Biden Family Pardons
DeSantis Shuts Down Reporter Who Criticizes Trump’s Immigration Policies
Trump DOJ Dismisses Case Against Doctor Who Exposed 'Trans' Surgeries at Texas Children's...
Do Americans Support Limits on Abortion? Here's What a New Poll Shows
Remember 'Mostly Peaceful Protests'? Check Out the Media's New Narrative for Covering Anti...
Trump Just Revoked Fauci’s Security Detail
Tipsheet

Puerto Rico Botches Ballot Delivery, Party Leaders Sue

(AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

The leading candidates in Puerto Rico’s primary elections moved to sue the Puerto Rican elections committee after the state failed to deliver paper ballots to polling stations. 

Advertisement

Well into the morning, truck drivers sat at distribution centers with empty containers, waiting for the elections commission to release the ballot backlog. Some centers that received notification ahead of time rescheduled their polling hours, causing widespread confusion. Staffers grew impatient and abandoned their posts, while others were ordered to shut down centers by their municipal leaders. Hundreds of voters were forced to return home on Sunday without voting, as centers received ballots hours too late or not at all. 

The elections commission is “not attending to the press,” according to a spokesperson.  

The Financial Oversight and Management Board issued a statement on Sunday excoriating the elections commission for its “dysfunctional” voting operation: “The disruptions today are the result of inefficient organization at an agency that only two weeks ago struggled to procure the printing of ballots for an election that was originally supposed to take place on June 7. This is not an issue of funding.”

Advertisement

Both majority and minority party presidents moved to suspend voting late Sunday, calling for a partial primary the following week. Pandemic circumstances had already compelled officials to delay the election from June to August. The elections commission agreed to suspend voting on Sunday, ruling to only allow voting in locations where stations remained closed throughout the entirety of the election period.

On Tuesday, Gov. Wanda Vasquez sued to allow participation at voting centers that had opened late, not only those that had never opened at all. She also protested efforts to release unofficial results prior to the August 16 redo. 

“The uncertainty created since the process began in morning hours caused thousands of voters to leave the voting centers where chaos and confusion reigned,” she said. The island’s supreme court agreed to take the case.

New Progressive Party leader Pedro Peirluisi, as well as Popular Democratic Party statesmen Sen. Eduardo Bhatia and Carlos Delgado, are advocating for officials to begin counting ballots already cast and publicizing the results. 

Some are attributing the disastrous outcome to the ineptitude of an amateur election commission after Vasquez dismissed vice-presidential electoral commissioners following election reforms passed in June.

Advertisement

The sweeping reform bill weathered criticisms from all parties as it was being discussed. Vasquez said it would provide increased access to absentee voting, but civil liberties organizations and opposition parties took umbrage over an online voting provision. 

They said it would jeopardize election security and reduce public trust in the effectiveness of their vote. The ACLU, which has now filed a separate lawsuit against the Puerto Rico election commission for its failure to deliver ballots, then lobbied against the online voting measure.

“The right to vote isn’t just the right to cast a ballot, but also to have your vote count. Our concern is not only that the voting rights of the Puerto Rican population will run the risk of being tampered with, but also that they won’t necessarily know that their vote counted,” said Mayte Bayolo, an attorney for ACLU’s Puerto Rican branch. 

Responding to fierce opposition, Vasquez cut the online voting provision from the bill before signing it into law. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement