How much emphasis will international monitors affiliated with
the United Nations place on voter fraud allegations come Election
Day?
Probably not that much since monitors recruited from parts of
Europe and Asia are only coming to America to “investigative voter
suppression activities by conservative groups,” according to a
report in the Hill.
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE),
a UN partner, is the primary culprit here. The OSCE is expected to
send 44 monitors across the U.S. on Election Day to ensure that
various ballot integrity efforts do not interfere with the right to
vote, the report says.
But what about those Americans, including many minorities, who
have had their votes canceled out as a result of fraud at the
ballot box?
The OSCE has already exchanged notes with “liberal leaning civil
rights groups” that oppose voter identification laws. But as I, and
others,
have previously reported, minorities favor voter ID in even
larger numbers than white Americans. That’s because they tend to be
the victims of voter fraud. If the UN is genuinely concerned about
the sanctity of American elections, it ought to send
representatives to visit with the Democrats in Rhode Island who
passed a voter ID bill in response to rampant voter fraud.
Or, better yet, the UN should stay out of American politics
altogether.
Catherine Engelbrecht, founder and president of True the Vote, has a succinct
observation.
“The United Nations has no jurisdiction over American
elections.”
Quin Hillyer
recently wrote of the need for Republican and conservative
leaders to step up and defend True the Vote. That post is looking
very prescient these days.
Going into Election Day, the group has come under attack from
organized labor and various leftist groups that deny voter fraud is
a serious problem. Now there is good reason to believe the
concerned citizens active with True the Vote are also up against
the UN.