Jane Hughes manages the ballot distribution table at the Eaton Elementary polling station in Wilmington early Tuesday evening.
                                 Mark Darrough | Carolina Public Press

Jane Hughes manages the ballot distribution table at the Eaton Elementary polling station in Wilmington early Tuesday evening.

Mark Darrough | Carolina Public Press

In the U.S., poll watchers have participated in elections since the 18th century. Laws and rules for poll watchers vary from state to state. The role of poll watchers came under scrutiny by the Republican National Committee during the 2020 elections, after former President Donald Trump’s allegations of voter fraud.

Poll watchers provide transparency and are a part of the checks and balances system for elections.

“Poll watchers can increase some trust in the system,” said Christopher Cooper, a professor of political science and public affairs at Western Carolina University.

“If I’m a Democratic or Republican voter and I see a member of my own party there, it can be a cue that everything is OK and there is no systematic widespread voter fraud,” Cooper said. He doesn’t view poll watchers as necessary to ensure a fair election, but they do play an important role, he said.

Currently, only poll observers appointed by a political party, or partisan poll watchers, are allowed inside the polling locations, according to the N.C. State Board of Elections. The chief judge, or supervisor of an election precinct, selects a space for observers that is close enough to where they can hear voters checking in without disrupting voting.

Each political party can appoint two site-specific poll watchers and one at-large observer, and they can be at a polling location at the same time.

Currently, poll watchers are allowed to take notes, electronically on a computer or phone, without taking pictures, video or audio. They can periodically approach registration, ballot or help tables so long as they are not disrupting voters or election officials, or viewing confidential information.

Poll watchers can also report their concerns to the chief judge or the one-stop manager, walk outside the polling location to monitor curbside voting, walk outside to make calls as allowed by the chief judge or one stop manager, get a list of voters who have voted, and view bound sets of completed authorization to vote or one-stop applications.

They are prohibited from the following:

Disrupting election workers when they open or close the polls

Speaking to voters or voter assistants

Disrupting the voting process

Wearing or passing out campaign material

Going behind the registration ballot or help tables

Entering the voting booths

Going near voting equipment

Viewing confidential voter information

Seeing what’s on the voted ballots

Getting into cars containing curbside voters

Providing voters with assistance or photograph

Filming or recording voters without proper consent.

But CPP spoke to three poll watchers who said that the rules varied from polling location to polling location in terms of what they could or couldn’t do.

“The chief judges had dissenting ideas or understanding on what was and wasn’t allowed,” said Josh Prizer, a Wake County Republican poll watcher. “It was dependent upon the chief judge at different polling locations.”

Jay DeLancy, a former poll watcher who has served in more than a dozen elections and the executive director of the Voter Integrity Project of NC, a Fuquay-Varina-based organization, said sometimes election officials impose additional restrictions.

“The law has been clear that there are only a few things an observer is not allowed to do,” DeLancy said. “Officials from the precinct level, county elections directors and the state board of elections come up with — just dream up new—restrictions outside of the law.”

DeLancy said he believes the new rules will provide more clarity by codifying the responsibilities of a poll watcher.