https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...Bnb7KzElection  Day was Nov. 2, but if you lived in Bucks County, Pa., and you thought  you would know the winners by the end of the week, you were in for a  disappointment. One week after the fact, the county was still trying to  figure out which ballots to count and who won. Not surprisingly, some  people sending mail-in ballots were unable to follow simple  instructions. Also not surprisingly, the election board was still  debating what to count - even in the case of unsigned ballots, which are  clearly illegal under Pennsylvania law (eventually, these ballots were  rejected).
But Bucks County is not the only place where delays and debates occur. Election workers not following 
instructions, machines 
jamming, 
false registrations and voting in the 
wrong precinct  are just some of the various mistakes that occur regularly.  Individually, each problem is minor and not likely to result in a  change, but the collective weight of mistakes and regularity of  occurrence are grating, to say the least.
Worse,  tracking who is and who is not eligible to vote is far from assured.  When a person dies, their county election department is one of the  places that is supposed to get a copy of the death certificate - at  which point they are removed from the rolls. How efficiently do you  think that's working? Not very well in Michigan, where up to 
25,000 deceased people are still on the voter rolls.
The  same problem exists for changes of address, where your "new" county  election department is tasked to inform the county of your previous  residence that you have moved, which takes your name off the rolls. That  process is not going too well either, with 
over 7 million voters registered in more than one jurisdiction - and virtually unchanged since 2014, so the problem is not getting better.
None of this proves fraud or vindicates Donald Trump's allegations of a stolen election.
If  anything, the fact that Trump and his legal team could not find a  single vote to overturn in the midst of all these voting roll problems  makes his crew so incompetent they don't even qualify to serve as "
Keystone Kops."
But  it does show that the opportunity exists - and where there is both  opportunity and motive, somebody, somewhere will take advantage.
The  problem is not in high-profile, well-funded races, where a combination  of media and partisan scrutiny pairs with the resources for poll  watchers and lawyers. No, the problem is in low-profile local races  where candidates don't have the resources for lawyers and investigators.
What's  the motive? Not only do local governments have their own patronage,  contracts, public authorities and finance, but they make land use and  permitting decisions that are worth millions. Consider a municipality in  an "off-year" with low turnout, but dozens or even hundreds of  non-existent voters on the rolls. With no media coverage, limited  partisan interest and low funds, it would be quite tempting for an  unscrupulous land developer to "nudge" the vote in one direction - and  who would know? Or care to investigate?
We know that elections have been stolen or been subject to fraud: 
local elections, 
state elections and 
national elections; Robert Caro essentially proves Lyndon Johnson stole his 
1948 U.S. Senate primary and may have stolen Texas for President Kennedy in 
1960. But the scattering of proven stolen elections likely hides many more. After all, why register 
thousands of fraudulent voters, if you don't intend to use them at some point?
Election  fraud has three possible outcomes: 1) You steal enough votes to win, 2)  You steal votes, but not enough to win, and 3) You steal votes, but you  would have won anyway. In the latter two cases, the election fraud does  not change who won. If a candidate wins in a landslide, there is little  impetus to investigate. The same holds for a candidate who wins despite  an attempt to steal the election. Why don't we hear much about election  fraud? Simply because examples #2 and #3 are not investigated. Should  criminals be let off the hook just because they are bad at their chosen  profession?
Voter  fraud and election security is proving to be a potent issue beyond just  Republican voters. Lost in all the handwringing over Trump's sore-loser  whining and the media hyperventilating over GOP voters' acquiescence is  that independents are also listening. According to 
YouGov, 39 percent of independents think President Biden was not legitimately elected - even 5 percent of Democrats agree.
When it comes to being a sore loser, Trump has company among Republican 
and Democratic voters. Only 
26 percent  of voters think the correct person won each of the last two  Presidential elections, according to Rassmussen, with 52 percent of  Democrats not thinking Trump legitimately won in 2016 (20 percent of  independents) and 66 percent of Republicans thinking likewise about  Biden (25 percent Independents). YouGov puts the number of Republicans  who think Trump beat Biden at 76 percent. And plenty of Republicans  remember Terry McAuliffe 
refusing to accept the results of the 2000 presidential election.
Put  together, GOP demands for better election accountability, post-election  audits, voter ID and general transparency will prove to be powerful  issues going forward. There is surprising public agreement on a series  of election integrity questions.
According to 
Pew Research,  76 percent of voters support requiring a photo ID to vote (61 percent  of Democrats, 93 percent of Republicans), 82 percent want a paper backup  to electronic voting, and 78 percent support early in-person voting (63  percent of Republicans, 91 percent of Democrats).
Removing  people from the voter rolls is less popular ("purging the rolls"), with  just 46 percent support. But that is when the question asks about  removing people who have not "recently" voted. In the past, a voter  purge was for those who have not voted in 4-5 years (an automatic purge  would remove dead people and duplicate voters). I think it is quite  likely if the question included a 5-year time frame, it would garner  significant support. Regardless, Republican support for the purge has  gone up in three years from 53 percent to 68 percent, and even  Democratic support has edged up from 23 percent to 27 percent.
Voting  should not be a medieval gauntlet, but it should have appropriate  safeguards. Deciding who should run our various governments is a  critical act with far-reaching consequences. The priority should be to  educate the public and ensure the integrity of the process, not to make  it as easy as ordering a pizza.
Keith  Naughton, Ph.D., is co-founder of Silent Majority Strategies, a public  and regulatory affairs consulting firm. Naughton is a former  Pennsylvania political campaign consultant. Follow him on Twitter @KNaughton711.
Comment - cogent, and constructive article - refuting teh DPST rationale for HR- 1 adn 4 bills - which legalize Voter fraud for teh democraticommunist party
and their Plantation mentality that states - Black Peoples are incompetent to obtain ID cards. 
They must have white liberal supervision to live their lives on our Plantation. 
Buck fiden
From my cold dead hands! 
95 - 'Proof' has arrived!