Confessions of a Pennsylvania Poll Worker

Why an election can’t be stolen in Pennsylvania

Daniel McIntosh, PhD.
The Geopolitical Economist

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Last night, I reviewed the required training to be a poll worker in Pennsylvania. This isn’t the first time I’ve served as one of the people who sit behind the desks as people come through to vote. I swear an oath, like everyone else who does the job, not to allow my personal preferences to affect my task. I will ensure that each ballot is cast in secret and sent to the officials who oversee the count.Each time I serve, I must take a training course that re-familiarizes me with election procedures. I pass quizzes to prove I can open the polls, assemble and test the voting machines, and prepare the ballots and other paperwork. I must ensure each voter can cast a vote, run totals from each voting machine, and collect the secret ballots. I check that the count of used and unused ballots agrees, then assemble and seal each. Finally, I shut down the machines and close the precinct.

Note: this is not all that I do. Each step above has sub-steps and checks to ensure the vote is fair and honest. The is sixty-seven pages long. And the work is much as The Economist described it last week: “”

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Daniel McIntosh, PhD.
The Geopolitical Economist

Writer, consultant, public speaker. Tired of living in the Dark Ages. Working for something better. Top writer in politics and economics.

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