This article was republished with permission from 海角社区app鈥檚 news partner . Sign up for

The top election official in one of Virginia鈥檚 biggest counties announced Friday that he鈥檚 quitting his job later this year due to stress and called out what he described as a 鈥渂ullshit鈥 ploy by local Republicans to try to undermine his office by installing their own people in jobs overseeing polling places.
Prince William County Registrar Eric Olsen said he would resign after the midterm elections after a local GOP leader made phone calls to election officers suggesting they would be getting different Election Day assignments than the ones Olsen had announced. The elections office also received a letter from a lawyer for the local GOP threatening a lawsuit if Republicans didn鈥檛 get more representation in the higher-ranking election chief and assistant chief roles.
Olsen said he had worked diligently to recruit more Republican election officers in Prince William 鈥 a Northern Virginia county of more than 465,000 people that will be a key battleground in this year鈥檚 congressional races 鈥 without much assistance from the local Republican party he felt was turning needlessly hostile.
鈥淚 am resigning after this election,鈥 Olsen said to the surprise of many attending Friday鈥檚 Prince William Electoral Board meeting. 鈥淏ecause if this is how the general registrars are treated when they are trying to do the right thing, then by God, what happens when something goes wrong?鈥
Olsen, who got the Prince William job just last year after more than a decade of elections work, added that he had recently received bad medical news about a heart condition, and the stress and pressure of working in an atmosphere of rampant suspicion of election officials was becoming too hazardous to his health.
鈥淲hen I get pissed off, I get pissed off. And I think this is bullshit,鈥 Olsen said. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 dead next year, I won鈥檛 be a very good registrar anyway.鈥
The surprise announcement comes amid growing concern about the morale of the people who do the ground-level work of running Virginia elections. Local election offices throughout the state are still facing intense scrutiny of their operations, much of it tied to unfounded right-wing conspiracy theories about fraud and other problems in the 2020 presidential election. As a result of that, many Republican activists are showing increased interest in signing up for jobs that let them keep a close eye on how voting works.
Prince William appears to be the rare Virginia locality that had a legitimate election problem in 2020. The county鈥檚 former registrar, Michele White, was recently indicted on corruption charges related to the 2020 cycle, but state and local officials are refusing to explain what the case is about.
The new Prince William controversy centers on聽聽that gives local political parties oversight of who鈥檚 serving as election officers and extra power to designate who should serve as chief and assistant chief election officers. The law requires parties to submit nominees for officers of election early in the year and instructs registrars to pull from those lists 鈥渋f practicable鈥 and prioritize partisan nominees for the chief roles.
Republicans suggested Olsen was overreacting to a request that he follow a law that they said prohibits Prince William from using more experienced nonpartisan election officers if a Republican, no matter their experience level, is available.
鈥淏est efforts and good intentions are not a substitute for obeying the law,鈥 said Republican Electoral Board member London Steverson. 鈥淎nd I鈥檓 sorry Eric has gone to the nuclear option here.鈥
In an interview, Prince William County GOP Chair Denny Daugherty said he鈥檚 simply asking the county to honor the political parties鈥 rights to pick their own representatives instead of having to accept the registrar鈥檚 choices.
鈥淚 shouldn鈥檛 be stuck with people who are not really Republicans and she shouldn鈥檛 be stuck with people who aren鈥檛 really Democrats,鈥 Daugherty said, motioning to Prince William Democratic Committee Chair Tonya James.
James said she felt there may be valid concern about the process, but she said it could be addressed in future election cycles instead of creating uncertainty just a few weeks out from Election Day.
鈥淚 do understand Denny鈥檚 concerns about some of the chiefs and assistant chiefs,鈥 James said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not concerned to the point that maybe they need to be reassigned at this juncture. But moving forward, that needs to be a priority.鈥
Daugherty estimated the issue involved 20 to 30 positions.
The state Department of Elections recently resent old guidance clarifying the process on partisan involvement in picking officers of election, a document Daugherty said backs his interpretation of the law.
The dustup drew a thundering condemnation from Prince William Electoral Board member Keith Scarborough, a Democrat, who pounded the table while calling the GOP鈥檚 move 鈥渋ncredibly outrageous.鈥
鈥淚 genuinely cannot believe that anyone thinks it鈥檚 a good idea to take an experienced chief out of a precinct and plug in someone who鈥檚 never worked an election,鈥 Scarborough told reporters after the meeting. 鈥淚f that鈥檚 what the Republicans think should be happening, I don鈥檛 buy it.鈥
After the electoral board held a closed session to discuss the issue, Scarborough indicated the county would not be acceding to Daugherty鈥檚 request. But Olsen said he expects the two sides to try to work out a compromise.
Daugherty said he was surprised the board didn鈥檛 appear to be consulting with the county attorney on what the law requires.
鈥淚t would be a shame if we had to file a suit in order to get their involvement in reviewing what is patently illegal,鈥 Daugherty said.
Most of Prince William鈥檚 voters live in the 7th Congressional District, where a hotly competitive contest is playing out between Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger and Republican challenger Yesli Vega. The county also touches the 10th Congressional District, where Republican Hung Cao is challenging Democratic Rep. Jennifer Wexton in a race that should favor Democrats but could be close if Republicans have a surprisingly strong showing in November.
Though Olsen won bipartisan praise as a competent and effective election administrator who鈥檚 served Prince William voters well, he told reporters he wouldn鈥檛 reconsider his decision to step down, possibly as soon as late November.
In 2020, Olsen said, Prince William had 466 Democratic election officers and 201 Republicans. This year, he said, there are 399 Democrats and 402 Republicans, the result of a targeted recruitment effort by his office to achieve partisan parity.
鈥淭o do all that and then to have the party come in with a team of lawyers 鈥 They didn鈥檛 even nominate officers by the deadline,鈥 Olsen said. 鈥淭hey haven鈥檛 done much in the way of recruiting.鈥
The timing of Olsen鈥檚 departure could be significant. For now, Democrats have a 2-1 majority on the county electoral board to which Olsen reports. But the board will flip to Republican control at the end of the year due to Gov. Glenn Youngkin鈥檚 victory last year, raising questions about who will be in control when the board picks Olsen鈥檚 successor.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not a good time to be an election official right now,鈥 Olsen said as he publicly announced his departure. 鈥淎nd I think there鈥檚 legitimate fear about what could come down the road for people who are just trying to do their jobs.鈥
Unanswered questions about 2020
At the meeting, Scarborough, the Democratic board member, denounced the trend of election offices being inundated with Freedom of Information Act requests about the 2020 election. Those requests, he said, are a waste of time and money by people still hung up on 鈥渢he big lie鈥 that widespread fraud occurred in 2020.
But Scarborough said he too could not comment on the pending corruption case that has raised doubts about the accuracy of the official vote totals Prince William reported in 2020.
Scarborough largely declined to discuss the indictment of White on charges of corrupt conduct, making a false statement as an election official and neglect of duty by an election official. Asked if the county鈥檚 2020 vote counts were accurate, Scarborough said 鈥渢hat鈥檚 one of the things in question.鈥
鈥淏ut I can tell you that whatever issues there were with the vote reporting, there was nothing that would鈥檝e changed the results of any election on the ballot,鈥 he said.
Electoral Board member Pamela R. Walker said Attorney General Jason Miyares hasn鈥檛 briefed local officials on the case.
鈥淪o I don鈥檛 know what he鈥檚 found,鈥 Walker said.
Miyares spokeswoman Victoria LaCivita refused to elaborate on the indictments this week, saying, 鈥淚 cannot comment on ongoing cases.鈥
The attorney general鈥檚 office revealed the indictments against White just a few days before announcing a dedicated 鈥渆lection integrity unit.鈥 In a statement last month, the Republican Party of Virginia said the prosecution sends 鈥渁 strong message to election officials throughout the state to follow the law.鈥
State Board of Elections Chairman Bob Brink also refused to comment on the case, citing 鈥減ending litigation.鈥
In an interview, Olsen said he too isn鈥檛 fully aware of what the indictments are based on. But he acknowledged the problem, whatever it was, led to slightly skewed vote counts from Prince William in 2020.
鈥淲ere they accurate? No,鈥 Olsen said. 鈥淲ere they enough to make a difference in any of the races? No.鈥
Former President Donald Trump lost Virginia to President Joe Biden by 10 percentage points, or more than 450,000 votes.
In her first public comments on the matter, White聽聽the case against her was a politically motivated effort by Republicans to justify the new election integrity unit. The attorney general鈥檚 office called that claim 鈥渦tterly false.鈥