How Precinct Strategy Builds Local Political Control
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Your local party isn’t some untouchable machine. Sometimes it’s 20 or 30 people making decisions that ripple into who gets endorsed, who gets funded, and who even appears on the ballot. We talk with Steve Stern from the Election Integrity Project about precinct strategy and why becoming a precinct committee officer can be the most direct form of grassroots political power available in the United States.
Steve breaks down why he helped launch PrecinctProjectUSA.org as a faster on-ramp for civic engagement, especially for people who try to volunteer and never get called back. We get practical about how precinct roles work across different states, why there are hundreds of thousands of committee slots nationwide, and how filling those seats changes everything from turnout operations to accountability inside the party. Steve also shares the story of meeting President Trump, explaining what that conversation was like and why he believes precinct organization is a missing ingredient in modern campaigns.
From there we move into election integrity: poll workers, poll watchers, the realities of early voting in universal mail-in ballot states, and the specific vulnerabilities people worry about like voter rolls, delayed ballot counting, and voting machines. We also raise the bigger question of how citizens fix a system without crossing lines that create dangerous precedents. If you care about election integrity, precinct strategy, and local political organizing, this is a roadmap built for action, not spectatorship.
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