Ronna McDaniel, chair of the Republican National Committee, has appeared on Steve Bannon’s War Room podcast at least three times in October to recruit poll watchers and workers who could be organized to intimidate or disenfranchise voters. Although McDaniel in many ways epitomizes the establishment wing of the Republican Party, which Bannon often claims he opposes, the two are united in their efforts to field an army of poll workers and volunteers throughout the country.
This voting cycle will be the first midterm election where Republicans are freed from a consent decree that “prohibited it from challenging voters’ qualifications and targeting alleged fraud.” In 2020, during the first presidential election after the consent decree expired, law enforcement and outside groups associated with the Republican Party were observed intimidating voters in several states.
Now, with midterm elections less than two weeks away, McDaniel and Bannon are in lockstep, strategizing in the open about ways to challenge votes, purge rolls, and otherwise enact what Bannon calls the “precinct strategy.” Bannon’s show is specifically central to what The Washington Post referred to as the RNC’s “unprecedented push to recruit thousands of poll workers and watchers,” and it’s one of the only outlets where McDaniel emphasizes — or even mentions — the need to recruit poll watchers. When McDaniel has appeared recently in other right-wing media outlets, she has mostly stuck to her standard talking points, primarily blaming Democrats for rising crime.
On October 11, McDaniel described the RNC’s efforts, underlining that the organization was “under a consent decree for 40 years, not allowed to do poll watching or election integrity.”