Detroit Deadline | Oakland City Clerk Becomes Face of Republican Resistance to Trump’s Election Fantasies



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The Rochester Hills city secretary is the first and last person to be quoted Sunday in a front-page New York Times report on Republicans in America who resisted “pressure from their own party to revoke the vote after [President] Trump was left behind on November 3. “


Tina Barton: “We have to … rebuild the trust of the voters.” (Photo: Facebook)

Tina Barton, who has overseen elections in her Oakland County community since 2013, tells the newspaper that she knew she was “going to expose myself to criticism” and jeopardize potential future campaigns for higher office.

“But the real cost was in the trust of the voters. I told my deputy that all these things must be put aside and I have to tell the truth.”

He soon found himself the target of unholy and threatening emails and phone calls. And while she was comforted to learn that she was safe because her husband is a deputy sheriff, they nevertheless improved the security system at home. “It is devastating to see what the response to our profession has been and how we have come, as a country, to think that violence and threats are the answer,” he said. …

“As a Republican, I am concerned that [a quickly fixed Rochester Hills mistake] is being intentionally mischaracterized to undermine the electoral process, “Barton said in a video he posted on Twitter, which was viewed more than 1.2 million times. …

“Now we have to go back and rebuild the trust of the voters and let the people realize that our elections are not rigged. We have to step back and say how we restore public trust in a system that is completely torn down.”

“Proud of you,” Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson tweeted with a link to the article.

The pressure on Barton included a call from a Trump campaign representative asking him to sign a letter that casts doubt on the outcome in Michigan.

The Times’ long look back, titled “Even When Trump Claimed Fraud, These Republicans Didn’t Buckle,” is from Peter Baker of the Washington bureau and Detroit reporter Kathleen Gray, a Free Press reporter for 20 years until he changed roles In May.



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