Chris McDaniel Rushes to Review Ballots from Tuesday's Electionhttp://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2014/06/27/McDaniel-Rushes-To-Review-Ballots-From-Tuesday-s-ElectionBoyle's article is loaded with a lot of information, small sample:
To make matters even more interesting, Democrats in Hinds County are accusing Cochran’s Hinds County Republicans of illegal activity.
In an interview with Breitbart News on Thursday, McInnis--the Hinds County Democrats' top official--said that Perry asked Democrats to help him "break the law" by working together to accept Democratic voters who voted in the June 3 Democratic primary and in Tuesday's GOP runoff.
Charging that Perry "has never ran a legal election in this state" because "he was never qualified by the Secretary of State's office," McInnis alleged that Perry asked him and county Democrats not to share records of who voted in each primary on June 3. The practice--called "switching the books"--is where, heading into a runoff, Democrats and Republicans swap poll books that list which voters voted in the respective parties' recent primaries.
To start a primary, since Mississippi doesn't technically have party registration, Democrats and Republicans each begin with their own lists of all registered voters. As voters cast ballots, poll workers write "VOTED" next to the names of people who vote in their primaries. If the process heads to a runoff in either or both parties' primaries, the Democrats switch their books with Republicans and vice versa so poll workers in the runoffs can ensure nobody who voted in the Democratic primary votes in the GOP runoff and vice versa.
"The Democrats get the Republican book and the Republicans get the Democrat book to protect against crossover voting," McInnis said. "In Mississippi and a lot of other states, if you voted in the Republican primary, you must only vote in the Republican runoff; you can't switch."
McInnis alleged in an interview with Breitbart News that Connie Cochran, Sen. Cochran's sister-in-law and the Perry and Hinds County election commissioner, asked local Democrats not to switch the poll books.
"In the state of Mississippi, you have to take steps to prevent crossover voting," McInnis said. "If you voted Democrat in the Democratic primary, you can't vote in the Republican runoff. The way we protect that is we switch the poll books. Pete Perry and Connie Cochran, who's the chair of the election commission, called us and asked us not to switch the books--which is a clear violation of the law."
McInnis told Breitbart News he personally witnessed at least one Hinds County precinct--Precinct 16--where the books had not been switched during the runoff day. "I went out to a precinct to make sure the laws were being followed, and I got there at about 4 o'clock p.m.," McInnis said. "They had not switched the books, under the influence of the young Republican and Democratic workers there. I demanded that they switch these books immediately. The Democratic poll manager there switched the books at 4 o'clock that evening.”
McInnis said he thinks Perry engaged in this practice throughout the entire county, but he can't be sure because Democrats were only allowed inside 15 of the county's 109 precincts on election day. Two Democrat candidates for the U.S. House third congressional district in Mississippi headed to a runoff, and while Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS) represents most of Hinds County, the third congressional district has 15 precincts inside Hinds County.
"I think this was county-wide, but we only had 15 precincts because we only had a small runoff in a very small part of the county; we only had 15 precincts in the eastern part of the county," McInnis said. "The rest of the county had only the Republican runoff, so we had no authority to go to Republican polling places and do anything about it. But in the places we could, we did--because we did not want to be accused of anything with the Republican Party."
When asked how Perry could have succeeded in not switching the books--since he and other Democrats refused to cooperate with his request on the grounds that they believed it was illegal--McInnis replied that he worked with Sen. Cochran's sister-in-law--the election commissioner in Hinds County--to get the job done. "Connie Cochran is the election commissioner," McInnis said.