Editor’s note: Thank you, Jeff Landry, for throwing Saturday’s election into as much confusion as humanly possible in your effort to suppress Democrat voting. Below is a description of the frustration—and illegal suppression—experienced by one voter in Caddo Parish.
Now that I’ve had time to sit on it, I am going to share, more thoroughly, how my voting experience went down. Before I continue, I want to make clear that I am not confused about what was supposed to happen at the polling station. I am not an uninformed voter. I’m registered for the Democratic party. Because I am a registered Democrat, I should have been provided with a Democratic ballot. In my region, the Democratic ballot should have included the races for Senate and Public Service Commissioner seats along with the 5 amendments.
After signing in, as I was directed to the booth, the poll worker stated, “You can only vote on the amendments today.” I said that is incorrect and that I was supposed to be able to also vote for the Senate and PSC races. The worker told me that “those are later.” So I clarified that the house race is the only one that is suspended and that I should be able to vote on the Senate and PSC races today. After that, the worker re-stated that I would only be able to vote on the amendments and sort of shrugged. Inside the booth, sure enough, the Senate and PSC races were dark and only the amendments lit up and allowed selection. I made my selections and cast my ballot because I didn’t know what else to do at that time and was in shock at what I was being told.
As soon as I walked out is when I did the Facebook live. It was still early in the morning and I didn’t know who’d be awake to call. After the live video, I sat in my car in the parking lot, shaking. I messaged some friends and they provided me with a hotline for Louisiana Democratic Party (225-255-3401), where I left a message. Also the hotline for the Louisiana Secretary of State election hotline (1-800-883-2805), where I spoke to a specialist who verified I absolutely should have been able to vote for Senate and PSC seats. And finally the Election Protection hotline (1-866-OUR-VOTE), where I spoke to another person to report the incident.
This happened at the David Raines polling station.
After arriving home, I left messages with news media. I’ve also noticed other people experiencing a wide range of problems and inconsistencies all over social media. Beyond registered voters being given the wrong ballots and incorrect information, the confusion among no-party voters (and poll workers) was extremely high (not to mention the general chaos caused by Landry’s last-minute changes). This election was disgusting. We’re operating in a broken, corrupt system.
And of course I’ve sent a complaint to the Caddo Parish Clerk Of Court. And I’ve submitted my info to a tracking form started by the Nick Albares for U.S. Senate campaign (link in comments).
This is just a taste of what Squeaky Toy Landry and the Repugnantcan legislature is planning for upcoming elections, particularly the mid-term election this fall. It’s part of Project 2025 to prevent as many Democratic voters by confusion, obfuscations and outright lies. That was precisely Jeff Landry’s intent when he crammed through the legislature the closed primary system—Ed.



