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Politics

Trump's Claims Of 'Rigged' Election Put His Supporters, Voting Rights Groups On Alert

The rising sun casts shadows of voters waiting to vote at a polling place in Los Angeles, Nov. 4, 2008.
Associated Press
The rising sun casts shadows of voters waiting to vote at a polling place in Los Angeles, Nov. 4, 2008.

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump's claims of a "rigged" election and voter fraud are having an effect in Southern California.

Some of his supporters are voicing concerns and planning to take action on Nov. 8.

Despite assurances from California election officials that the state’s election system is among the most secure in the country, some Trump backers plan to monitor the polls in person on Election Day.

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Mary Henderson, head of the Trump campaign for Riverside and San Bernardino counties, told KPCC on Thursday that she is frankly worried about voting security issues — and so are the many Republicans she talks to.

"One hundred percent of the people that call me, or at least 99 percent, is someone that’s concerned," Henderson said.

Henderson said she knows of several dozen Trump volunteers who will be traveling to Riverside to monitor the polls for any problems.

There are more than 100,000 Trump volunteers in California, according to Jon Cordova, Trump’s California communications director. Cordova said the campaign emphasizes non-violence in its messaging to its volunteers.

But he said recent events, like the damage to Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, have some on edge.

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"We’re careful about our volunteers, to make sure we don’t put them in harm’s way ... it is a concern," Cordova said.

Others worry Trump’s rhetoric may spur his supporters into violence. Several of Trump events, including a rally he held in Costa Mesa in April, have turned violent with supporters or protesters clashing with police or each other.

Meanwhile, hundreds of nonpartisan volunteers will also be monitoring polling locations in California on Election Day.

Asian Americans Advancing Justice California, a nonpartisan group that advocates for Asian Americans and voting rights, plans to send 600 trained volunteers to polling places in 25 counties, including Riverside and Orange, to help voters with limited English proficiency.

But the group also said volunteers will be on the lookout for voters who are "intimidated or harassed, and if voters are being asked to show identification inappropriately, among other issues,” Deanna Kitamura, the group's voting rights project director, said in a statement.

“If our monitors observe or report any major issues, we will be in immediate contact with election officials on Election Day. We want all voters to be able to cast an informed ballot and to have a positive experience in this election,” Kitamura said.

Karin Wang, vice president of programs and communications at Advancing Justice Los Angeles, added, “I think all of us have a pretty strong fear that we might see things this year that we haven’t seen in the past.”

The National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Educational Fund, a nonpartisan group based in Los Angeles, recently asked the Justice Department to help ensure disruption-free elections.

The group's executive director, Arturo Vargas, said:

“What we are most concerned about is anybody who takes it upon themselves to be their own poll watchers, and to try to determine who is and who is not eligible to vote simply because of their appearance."

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