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RIGOP files complaint after sample ballot papers distributed in Portsmouth
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RIGOP files complaint after sample ballot papers distributed in Portsmouth

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A complaint was made to Şti. Rhode Island Secretary of State And Portsmouth Canvas Department It is examining reports of a group distributing altered sample ballot papers outside a polling station in Portsmouth, raising concerns that they were being used to mislead or confuse voters.

“I went to the polling place and asked them to stop it, and they did,” said Registrar of Voters Jacqueline Schulz. “This was upsetting to voters, and that’s the point. When I receive information that voters are upset, I address it. ”

Anthony D’Ellena works as a field organizer at RIGOP. Senate candidate Patricia MorganHis campaign reported that many voters in Portsmouth “were given official Rhode Island ballots that appeared to have been falsified to influence voter choice. These ballots had the names of Republican candidates whited out, while Democratic candidates were preselected.”

But the complaint doesn’t seem to go very far.

“The material in question is not an official ballot paper. Therefore, there is no case of tampering with the ballot paper or requiring further action by the Electoral Board.” said Chris Hunter, spokesman for the Rhode Island Board of Elections.

D’Ellena alleged that State Rep. Michelle McGaw and the wife of former state Sen. James Seveney distributed ballots outside polling stations.

Ballots were allegedly distributed around the polling place at Portsmouth High School. Moderator Heather Sullivan hadn’t seen the ballots in person, only took a look at the paper they were printed on and noticed they were a different size than regular ballots. He said it was all technically legal, though not morally dubious, from his perspective, since the campaigners were distributing them in the same area where other campaigns were distributing literature and calling them sample ballots. But he shared concerns that they may be trying to influence inexperienced voters.

“I feel like someone who only comes to vote every four years or is voting for the first time, could that have affected them? There’s a chance,” Sullivan said.

Sullivan said the group responsible hung out outside for a while before disappearing, and since his jurisdiction ended at the polling line outside his polling place, he decided to leave the matter to the Canvass Elections Office and other officials while continuing to manage the busy polling place. Even though they didn’t have any problems with the ballots, he said poll workers were scanning the ballot boxes regularly, and people weren’t there to make sure no one left campaign books in the ballot boxes.

D’Ellena said the complaint “was forwarded to the Rhode Island Secretary of State’s office to request an investigation and ensure the voting process remains transparent and trustworthy.” We believe voters have complete clarity and access to all candidates and are not misled when making their decisions. These are bad actors.”

In response to the allegations, the Portsmouth Democratic Town Committee released a statement on social media Tuesday evening explaining that the ballots distributed were “standard campaign literature, voter guides marking our candidates.” The statement noted that the guides were much smaller than the size of the ballot papers and said, “There is no way they can be confused with real ballot papers.”

The statement said that although the guides did not violate campaign literature laws, candidates were asked to stop distributing the guides.

This story has been updated to reflect new information.