Current:Home > MarketsMaine elections chief who drew Trump’s ire narrates House tabulations in livestream -消息
Maine elections chief who drew Trump’s ire narrates House tabulations in livestream
View
Date:2025-04-13 07:46:25
Follow AP’s coverage of the election and what happens next.
AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — Maine’s elections chief, a former civil liberties attorney who sparred with President-elect Donald Trump over ballot access, is acting like a play-by-play sports announcer as she describes the state’s process of determining a congressional winner through ranked choice voting.
Shenna Bellows is spending the week streaming the effort live on YouTube and answering questions in real time.
“We hope that when people see it for themselves, they will believe that our elections do have integrity, that they’re free and fair. And then maybe they’ll have a little more trust in the election officials who are working so hard to make these elections happen,” Secretary of State Shenna Bellows told The Associated Press.
Democratic Rep. Jared Golden led Republican challenger Austin Theriault by about 2,000 first-place votes after nearly 400,000 ballots were cast in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District, but neither got more than 49%, so the ranked choice process will reallocate other votes to determine a majority, her office announced.
The race between Golden and Theriault has played out as both parties struggle to control the U.S. House of Representatives. The Associated Press has not declared a winner.
Bellows, who took office in 2021, is a former director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Maine who drew the ire of Republicans when she ruled that Donald Trump’s role in the Jan. 6 insurrection made him ineligible to appear on the state’s GOP primary ballot. Trump did appear, and won, after the U.S. Supreme Court intervened. Bellows was doxed and swatted after that — her address and other personal data were posted online, and a fake emergency call sent officers to her home.
Lawyers for both candidates, campaign officials, journalists and police looked on Tuesday as election workers opened ballot boxes inside the building that houses the Maine State Police headquarters. Viewers could watch from two different angles, and Bellows occasionally aimed an iPad camera at the observers or her staff to explain what was happening.
Bellows described the chain of custody — election workers in each municipality secured the ballots in padlocked blue boxes sealed with secret codes, secured by padlocks and escorted by law enforcement to an “undisclosed location” that’s monitored constantly by officers and security cameras.
She also talked about digital security — describing the make, model and purpose of each machine and explaining steps to prevent tampering by cybercriminals or other malicious actors. None of the machines are connected to the internet, so there’s no way they could be hacked, and logic testing would catch any data mismatch, she said.
After the locked blue ballot boxes were wheeled into the room by a team including an armed detective, she invited lawyers for both campaigns to handle the tapes and confirm that voting machine printouts matched Election Night tallies.
Theriault’s campaign manager gave his seal of approval after consulting several times with Bellows on Tuesday.
“They let the lawyers from both sides look at the rooms where the ballots were stored. I think it’s a very open process,” Shawn Roderick told reporters in the hallway outside.
What to know about the 2024 election:
- Turning promises into policy: Americans frustrated over high prices await the change Trump has promised. Proponents of school choice will have an ally in the White House once again, but private schooling suffered high-profile defeats in several states.
- Balance of power: Republicans won control of the U.S. Senate, giving the GOP a major power center in Washington. Control over the House of Representatives is still up for grabs.
- AP VoteCast: Democracy was a motivating factor for both Harris and Trump voters, but for very different reasons.
- Voto a voto: Sigue la cobertura de AP en español de las elecciones en EEUU.
News outlets globally count on the AP for accurate U.S. election results. Since 1848, the AP has been calling races up and down the ballot. Support us. Donate to the AP.
Elections officials across the country have been vexed by efforts to challenge results, many of them ill-informed and fueled by deliberate attempts to undermine America’s democracy.
The mundane process of tabulating votes became a spectacle when Florida’s hanging chads controversy led to the “Brooks Brothers Riot” of GOP staffers who tried to shut down the count in 2000. Scratchy CCTV videos in Atlanta fueled an insatiable interest in the 2020 count after Trump ally Rudy Giuliani falsely accused Fulton County election workers of stuffing ballot boxes.
Those doubts persist even though Georgia’s Secretary of State, Brad Raffensperger, gave news conferences afterward insisting that the results, confirmed by multiple recounts, were valid.
In contrast, Bellows is anticipating and answering questions in real time. Promoting transparency is a wise response to mistrust in institutions and Republican criticism of ranked voting, particularly because of her Trump ballot decision, said Mark Brewer, a political science professor at the University of Maine.
“I think it is a smart move on her part,” Brewer said.
Ranked choice voting, which Maine voters adopted in 2016, is used in local races in many places but few states have accepted it.
This race had just one valid alternative to the top two — Diana Merenda, a retiree who formally declared her write-in candidacy to show opposition to the war in Gaza. She collected 400 votes. More than 12,000 other ballots had no first choices and need to be checked for second choices before being discarded.
“Keep in mind what we are doing first is verifying those initial totals and then running the ranked choice voting tabulation so that second choices for people who did not choose Golden or Theriault are folding up into the count, and as a result we’ll know, between those two, who has 50%,” Bellows said during the livestream.
There have been hiccups — they needed bolt cutters to open one padlock whose key was misplaced. Bellows announced this with a wide grin, as if to celebrate how each voter’s choices have been protected. Then she turned to an extended explanation of how memory sticks work.
After this week’s final tabulation, election workers will begin the formal recount Theriault requested, aiming to deliver final results before a Nov. 25 certification deadline.
___
Whittle reported from Portland, Maine.
veryGood! (967)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Louisville Finally Takes Stock of Abandoned Waste Dump Inside a Preserved Forest
- Houston LGBT+ Pride Festival and Parade 2024: Route, date, time and where to watch events
- Fans React After Usher's Speech Gets Muted at 2024 BET Awards
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Who plays Daemon, Rhaenyra and King Aegon in 'House of the Dragon'? See full Season 2 cast
- Detroit cops overhaul facial recognition policies after rotten arrest
- Knee injury knocks Shilese Jones out of second day of Olympic gymnastics trials
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Olivia Culpo Marries Christian McCaffrey in Rhode Island Wedding Ceremony
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Parties and protests mark the culmination of LGBTQ+ Pride month in NYC, San Francisco and beyond
- Hurricane Beryl an 'extremely dangerous' Cat 4 storm as it roars toward Caribbean
- How To Survive a Heat Wave on a Fixed Income
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Dakota Johnson Joins Chris Martin's Kids Apple and Moses at Coldplay's Glastonbury Set
- BET Awards return Sunday with performances from Lauryn Hill, Childish Gambino, Will Smith and more
- Ranking NFL division winners from least to most likely to suffer first-to-worst fall
Recommendation
Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
Cuba’s first transgender athlete shows the progress and challenges faced by LGBTQ people
Enjoy the beach this summer, but beware the sting of the jellyfish
3 NBA veterans on notice after 2024 draft: Donovan Clingan in, Blazers' Deandre Ayton out?
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
Horoscopes Today, June 28, 2024
Stock market today: Asian stocks log modest gains as economic data are mixed for Japan and China
Martin Mull, scene-stealing actor from 'Roseanne', 'Arrested Development', dies at 80