michigan, in new york, in pennsylvania, in georgia, in wisconsin all hear and decide cases today that mean that voters will have an opportunity to vote and states will be required to tally those votes accurately. and we oftentimes focus on the big dramatic cases and we had some of those today. that hand count that we worried about. we won that case today in court. the case in wisconsin that had so many people upset where republicans are trying to disenfranchise our men and women in uniform trying to vote in the military. we won that case today. but there were other cases that fly under the radar screen. if you look online, you can see images of duchess county literally wheeling voting machines into vasser college as a result of a lawsuit that requires the students of vasser to be able to vote on campus. we don t know what comes tom but today was a tomorrow but
some of those today. that hand count that we worried about. we won that case today in court. the case in wisconsin that had so many people upset where republicans are trying to disenfranchise our men and women in uniform trying to vote in the military. we won that case today. but there were other cases that fly under the radar screen. if you look online, you can see images of duchess county literally wheeling voting machines into vassar college as a result of a lawsuit that requires the students of vassar to be able to vote on campus. we don t know what comes tomorrow but today was a good day for democracy. what about what rachel reported on, this clash at the state level? how does that work and what is the recourse if states are trying to resist what is supposed to be routine federal oversight to make sure everyone,
not connected to the internet in any way. the reality is the machines themselves do a more accurate job of counting votes than humans do. when the machine count is over we do a hand count audit to confirm the machines are operating properly. just to be honest. do a job for the state and your party. don t make it personal. i agree with him. i am a republican. having said that, this is a nonpartisan role we have. the references made to being personal, all of this has gotten horribly personal. the personal insults that are hurled back and forth are not good for our democratic republic. it s not good for our civilization. for our culture. that s why this is so important. very well said. donie o sullivan, thank you for bringing us that great piece. our panel is back with us. that is the kind of reassurance you were talking about but also
people watching them. we each have the live stream cameras there are so many checks and balances in our system that people just aren t aware of because we ve never had to go out and articulate that for people because people were excepted for the most part, the results of the election. got to get rid of the machines go to paper ballots counted by the precinct committeemen. people vote on paper. but we do use a tabulation machine. and, again, we ve used those for decades. we know those machines have been audited over and over again. we ve shown time and time again, by many experts that our machines are not connected to the internet in any way. here s the reality, the machines themselves are doing more accurate job of counting votes than humans do. when the count is so far and the machine count is over, we do a hand count audit to confirm that the machines are operating properly. just to be honest, do a job for the state and your party. don t make it personal.