Former Republican Committeemen Claim Election Judges Coerced Into Voting GOP

(CBS) -- A day after the election, officials are still counting ballots and the investigation into who made robocalls that allegedly persuaded many judges not to show up Tuesday is heating up.

Two former Republican committeemen are telling 2 Investigator Pam Zekman they were removed because they objected to those tactics.

Judges of election are appointed by their respective parties and they look at a judge's primary voting records as part of the vetting process. But in these cases the former committeemen we talked to said that vetting crossed a line when judges were told who they had to vote for in the Tuesdays' election.

One says it happened at a temporary campaign headquarters at 8140 S. Western Ave, which we've confirmed it was rented by the Republican Party where election judges reported they were falsely told they had to appear for additional training.

And a former 7th ward committeewoman says she witnessed the same thing at 511. E. 79th Street campaign workers calling judges to come in for additional training. She says there wasn't any training.

"They were calling election judges, telling them to come in so they could get specific orders to vote for the Republican Party," said Charon Bryson.

She says she is a Republican but objected to the tactic used on the judges.

"They should not be be pressured or coerced into voting for someone to get a job, or to get an appointment," said Bryson.

Bryson says she thinks it is like "buying a vote."

"If you don't vote Republican you will not be an Republican judge, which pays $170," she said.

The Board of Elections is now investigating whether calls to judges assigned citywide resulted in a shortage that infuriated the mayor.

"What happened with the robocalls was intentional. As far as we can tell somebody got a list, a list with names and numbers, called them, not to educate, not to promote the democratic process, but to sew confusion," Emanuel said.

The Cook County Republican chairman says the tactics described were not approved by him or the party.

He also says Bryson was removed as a committeewoman for unethical conduct, and because she claimed she was a Republican when she had a Democratic voting history.

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