Those aren't the only changes -- this new law puts partisan county auditors and their staffs in charge of the recount instead of a board chosen by the campaigns in the race. Want to guess which party controls most of Iowa's county auditor positions? Yes, the one that just passed this bill into law.
Take it from Iowa state Sen. Sarah Trone Garriott, who has been through two recounts following elections for her Senate seat:
"Currently in our process, the county auditor and their staff, they’re very present, they support the process, they’re very engaged," she said. "But taking out the candidates’ representatives and the neutral party, putting it on a partisan elected official and the staff who are supervised and employed by them does not make it more fair."
It's clear that all this new law does is create opportunities for opponents of voting rights to suppress votes before they can be cast and the controlling party to silence votes after the election by having them tossed in a recount -- just like we're seeing in North Carolina with a race still not settled almost 6 months after Election Day.
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