Authoritarian nations, semi-legitimated dictatorships and dying democracies are regularly subjected to international observers whom they grudgingly allow into their countries to monitor elections. The United States sends teams of former government officials and private-sector volunteers around the world to certify —and sometimes condemn — electionpractices and results. They bear witness to vote tampering, citizen intimidation, ballot stuffing, polling place irregularities and outright
stolen elections. They also often get to watch inspiring people power and real democracy at work.
It’s now America’s turn.
his year, the global democratic community needs to gear up and step in to oversee, monitor and judge the fairness of November’s U.S. presidential election. Germany, Sweden,Japan, India, Australia, Canada, Costa Rica, Chile, Ethiopia, Tunisia, Israel, and other nations all need to up their game. They should immediately train and send new volunteers to conduct sweeping election monitoring across America, mostly in tough battleground states.
The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) already has a 500-person delegation slated to monitor America’s process. It should crank up those numbers significantly, especially since OSCE recently raised concerns around November’s “most challenging” election.
Read more at:https://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/op-ed/article245309125.html?fbclid=IwAR3Nxc7YDGeEPKftVEKi5N4wmm4BvUh-YktK2UEB7LcZR7S0yXpwxJfRF88
stolen elections. They also often get to watch inspiring people power and real democracy at work.
It’s now America’s turn.
his year, the global democratic community needs to gear up and step in to oversee, monitor and judge the fairness of November’s U.S. presidential election. Germany, Sweden,Japan, India, Australia, Canada, Costa Rica, Chile, Ethiopia, Tunisia, Israel, and other nations all need to up their game. They should immediately train and send new volunteers to conduct sweeping election monitoring across America, mostly in tough battleground states.
The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) already has a 500-person delegation slated to monitor America’s process. It should crank up those numbers significantly, especially since OSCE recently raised concerns around November’s “most challenging” election.
Read more at:https://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/op-ed/article245309125.html?fbclid=IwAR3Nxc7YDGeEPKftVEKi5N4wmm4BvUh-YktK2UEB7LcZR7S0yXpwxJfRF88