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Donald Trump's Poll-Watching Talk Spurs Call for International Monitors of U.S. Election

Citing Trump’s call to challenge voters, a top civil rights group wants international election observers to closely monitor the polls this November.
Image: U.S. Citizens Head To The Polls To Vote In Presidential Election
Lines of voters wait to cast their ballots as the polls open on November 6, 2012 in St. Petersburg, Florida. The swing state of Florida is recognized to be a hotly contested battleground that offers 29 electoral votes, as recent polls predict that the race between U.S. President Barack Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney remains tight.Edward Linsmier / Getty Images

Citing Donald Trump’s controversial call to his supporters to challenge voters at the polls, a leading civil rights group is urging international election monitors to beef up their efforts to observe this November’s U.S. presidential contest.

It’s the latest reflection of deep concern among voting rights advocates about potential voter intimidation and suppression this fall.

In a letter sent Saturday, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights asked the Warsaw, Poland-based Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to “greatly expand” its U.S. election monitoring program.

Related: Trump Poll-Watching Plan Stirs Voter Intimidation Fears

“A confluence of factors,” the civil rights group said, has made racial discrimination in voting a greater threat than at any time in recent history.

“The unprecedented weakening of the Voting Rights Act has led to a tidal wave of voter discrimination efforts nationwide and has required the United States to drastically scale back its own election monitoring program,” wrote Wade Henderson and Nancy Zirkin, president and vice president respectively of the Washington, D.C.-based Leadership Conference.

“In addition, a leading presidential candidate who has made the demonization of racial, ethnic, and religious minorities a hallmark of his campaign has recently urged supporters to challenge voters at polling sites nationwide.”

The letter also urged OSCE to target its resources on states where racial discrimination in voting or voter intimidation are particular threats. It singled out Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Arizona, Wisconsin, North Dakota, and Texas.

All those states have imposed restrictive voting laws or rules in recent years, though several have been blocked or softened by courts.

Related: Federal Judge Strikes Down Texas Law That Violates Voting Rights Act

In June, OSCE issued a “Needs Assessment Mission Report,” in which it said it planned to send 500 monitors to the U.S. Thomas Rymer, a spokesman for the OSCE, suggested in an email to NBC News Tuesday that the organization has no plans to change its monitoring program in response to the concerns raised by the Leadership Conference.

"The mission is due to deploy in early October, the information provided in the letter will be passed on to the mission," Rymer said. "Once deployed, the mission will contact all relevant electoral stakeholders, including The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, to discuss the pre-electoral environment and any concerns they may have with the preparations for elections."

Trump has lately warned on the campaign trail, without evidence, that court rulings against voter ID laws could let people vote up to fifteen times, enabling Democrats to steal the election.

In one stop in Altoona, Pennsylvania, he singled out “certain sections” of the state as particularly prone to fraud.

"Go down to certain areas and watch and study and make sure other people don't come in and vote five times," Trump said.

Trump's campaign followed up by asking visitors to its website to sign up to be a "Trump Election Observer." Those who do so receive an email declaring: "We are going to do everything we are legally allowed to do to stop crooked Hillary from rigging this election. Someone from the campaign will be contacting you soon."

Trump’s first general election TV ad, released last week, reinforces that message. In its second frame, it shows a polling place, with the words "system rigged" on the screen.

All this has led many voting rights advocates to fear that some Trump supporters, inflamed by their candidate’s rhetoric, could actively try to keep legitimate voters from the polls.

In one potential sign of trouble to come, a Florida-based Trump backer tweeted Friday: "We gonna be watch'n fer shenanigans...& haul ya away," above a photograph of a pickup truck with a cage in the truck bed.

Those concerns have been heightened by last month’s announcement by the U.S. Justice Department that it will reduce the number of its own election observers deployed to polling places this fall.

The DOJ said the pull-back was required by the Supreme Court’s 2013 ruling in Shelby County v. Holder, which significantly weakened the Voting Rights Act, though some voting rights advocates have called that an unnecessarily conservative reading of the ruling.

The OSCE is perhaps best known as an international security organization, but its human-rights arm sends election monitors at the request of member states. The U.S. government has invited OSCE monitors to observe the last three presidential elections, as well as the upcoming one. And American observers, under the OSCE’s auspices, have monitored elections in Russia, Ukraine, and other countries.

OSCE monitors have no legal authority to affect election proceedings. Still, in 2012, Greg Abbott, then the Republican Attorney General of Texas — he’s now the state’s governor — threatened to arrest OSCE monitors sent to his state.

In response, an OSCE spokesman singled out the wave of recent restrictive state voting laws, saying they violate America’s commitment to hold open elections.

This story has been updated.