Delaware Attorney General Matt Denn has pledged to enforce voter intimidation provisions in the state Constitution.
The provisions make it a crime in Delaware for a person to “by force, threat, menace or intimidation, prevent or hinder, or attempt to prevent or hinder, any person…qualified to vote from voting according to said person’s choice at any such general, special or municipal election.”
The advisory came after Presidential candidate Donald Trump urged supporters in Pennsylvania to monitor polling places for election fraud. Some critics took his remarks to mean the possibility of intimidating voters. Others said the businessman was simply warning about possible voter freaud.
The department’s Office of Civil Rights and Public Trust has provided written guidance to the state Department of Elections if such conditions arise, a release stated.
The guidance states that “among the activities that have been identified by a federal court as potential election-day voter intimidation are the following: persons other than duly-appointed election officers questioning voters about their credentials; persons impeding or delaying voters by asking for identification, videotaping, photographing, or otherwise making visual records of voters or their vehicles; or persons distributing literature at the polls outlining the fact that voter fraud is a crime and/or detailing the legal penalties for impermissibly casting ballots.”
DOJ notes that the Delaware Code has detailed provisions, which are administered by elections officials, allowing each political party to ensure the absence of election day fraud by challenging the eligibility of persons to vote within polling places in a proper fashion. In the upcoming primary and general elections, no citizens should take it upon themselves to interfere with people attempting to vote, but should report any concerns to state or county election officials. The Office of Civil Right and Public Trust will be prepared to respond on the primary and general election days to reports of possible voter intimidation.
“In the upcoming primary and general elections, no citizens should take it upon themselves to interfere with people attempting to vote, but should report any concerns to state or county election officials. The Office of Civil Right and Public Trust will be prepared to respond on the primary and general election days to reports of possible voter intimidation,” the department stated.