No, its in the hands of aggrieved individuals to challenge what happened.
With what evidence? What they can gather on their own? Again, part of the problem.
The people are in place; its just that you believe all the people whose job it is to police it are all in on it.
They're also the ones whose necks are one the line if it turns out that something went wrong, right? So they're automatically biased.
Let's just take the case of republicans getting thrown out of tabulation rooms to applause. Who got held accountable for that? Anyone? Or did people just say "yeah, our bad, so sorry, we'll try better next election", while giving knowing winks and high-fives out of view of the camera?
Not policing it is, yes, the same as being in on it, like the guard who looks the other way for a assassination.
We have audio of people whose job is, at that time, solely to count, being told to count.
"And we know they were there solely to count, because the lady in the audio said so, so we must believe her without question"
That sounds like circular logic. Who else was interviewed about this? The people who had questions? If they all agree "yes, we were initially mistaken in our role during this 'audit'", then fine. Otherwise, you're just taking her at her word and choosing to believe that the people with questions didn't know their role.
We have testimony of Republican challengers being thrown out solely from Republican challengers...
How do you think these things work? Do you think that Rudy Giuliani can just break into a democrat's house and force them to give testimony under oath?
No. He has no authority to do so. So of course you're going to get a self-selecting sample of Republican whistleblowers, because they're the injured party.
Have you heard any democrats come out and give testimony under penalty of perjury saying "no, nobody clapped"? Then we'd have a real argument on our hands. But until then you're just saying "republicans can't be trusted because republicans are bad!"
and then other testimony, from non-partisan workers as well as other Republicans, saying poll-watchers and challengers were able to do their jobs just fine.
No you don't, not for the same precincts. At most, you have people saying "technically, as long as there's only one poll-watcher in the building, the rules are being followed", and "technically, even if they're corralled in the corner of the room or six feet away behind a plexiglass shield, the rules are being followed". Other than that, what you have comes from officials who have skin in the game, not boots-on-the-ground workers.
I know this because you and others have said those things before.
Easier than you can comprehend.
Would you like another L?