Inside the Trump Campaign’s Strategy to Make Voting a Tooth-and-Nail Fight
The campaign’s focus on Election Day operations has
intensified, with aggressive plans for poll monitoring and other tactics that
Democrats say are efforts at vote suppression.
Danny
HakimStephanie Saul
By Danny
Hakim and Stephanie Saul
Oct. 9,
2020
When
President Trump used the prime-time debate last week to urge his supporters to
“go into the polls and watch very carefully,” he wasn’t just issuing a call for
a grass-roots movement or raising the prospect of intimidation tactics at voting
sites. He was also nodding to an extensive behind-the-scenes effort led by the
lawyers and operatives on his campaign.
Over the
summer, Mr. Trump named a new campaign manager, Bill Stepien, who was once a
top aide to former Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey before being fired amid
the “Bridgegate” scandal. Mr. Stepien swiftly elevated a group of lieutenants
focused on using aggressive electoral tactics, moves that led Marc E. Elias,
the leading election lawyer for the Democratic Party, to tweet that Mr. Trump
was “tripling down” on “opposing voting rights.”
One of the
main architects of the effort is Justin Clark, whom Mr. Stepien promoted to
deputy campaign manager. He has been viewed with suspicion among Democrats
since he was recorded last year saying, “Traditionally it’s always been
Republicans suppressing votes in places,” and adding that in 2020 the party
would “start playing offense a little bit.”
Other key
figures in the campaign include a senior aide who once oversaw a right-wing
information-gathering operation for the conservative Koch brothers; an adviser
who was involved in a secretive vote-challenge operation for President George
W. Bush’s re-election campaign in 2004; and a campaign counsel who is
coordinating a series of lawsuits aimed at preventing the expansion of mail
voting.
With polls
showing Mr. Trump trailing Joseph R. Biden Jr. nationally and in most swing
states, the president has increasingly focused attention on the voting process,
declaring that the only way he could lose is if the election is rigged and
refusing to commit to a peaceful transfer of power. With the election less than
a month away, his campaign has moved the idea of voting irregularities to the
forefront of both its ground operations and its legal strategy.
The
campaign is trying to shape the voting process in many ways. Following the
president’s lead, it has undertaken a legal and rhetorical assault on mail-in
balloting, claiming with no evidence that it is rife with fraud. It is also
pushing the boundaries of traditional poll monitoring in ways that many
Democrats believe amount to voter intimidation. And it has put legal pressure
on states to aggressively purge their voter rolls.
Campaign
officials tried to downplay Democratic anxiety and insisted they wanted
everyone to vote who wants to do so.
“I think we
need to just realize that we’re in a political campaign and all just follow the
law,” Mr. Clark said in an interview. “There are laws everywhere about how many
feet you can stand outside of a polling place and what you can wear and what
you can do.”
Few of the
campaign’s practices have prompted as much attention as its extensive plans for
poll watching. While both parties have trained official poll watchers for
decades, the president has stirred alarm among Democrats and some voting
experts who fear he is encouraging extralegal menacing at polling sites by
far-right groups and even random Trump supporters.
At the
debate Mr. Trump said that the Proud Boys, a far-right extremist group, should
“stand by,” a comment some interpreted as a call to arms in aiding his election
prospects in ways that could intimidate voters.
Those fears
were heightened by an episode in Fairfax, Va., last month, when Trump
supporters disrupted early voting, impeding access to a polling site.
“These are
not trained poll workers, these aren’t people who were recruited to do
anything,” Mr. Clark said. “There are — shocker — there’s going to be politics
in a presidential race. And people are going to wave flags and show stuff and
drive around and hold mini-rallies and hold sign-waving rallies and do things
like that, and it happens in a lot of places.”
Mr. Clark
and other campaign officials have said they will put 50,000 poll watchers and
electoral observers on the ground, including at least 1,600 in Philadelphia
alone. They are instructing them to record minutiae like the timing of paper
jams at polling places, but also pushing beyond the typical activity by
monitoring people picking up absentee ballots and videotaping the drop boxes
where they deposit them. Mr. Trump has even floated the idea of sending
sheriffs to the polls.
Republican
administrations in several states, including the battleground of Georgia, have
appointed voter fraud task forces they say are designed to root out cheating,
though Democrats view the panels, stacked with Republican prosecutors, as
instruments of voter suppression.
“These come
out of somebody’s Republican playbook,” said Cathy Cox, a Democrat who served
as Georgia’s secretary of state. “Unfortunately the goal is to intimidate
people and ultimately suppress votes.”
One Trump
campaign official recently emailed party officials in North Carolina and told
them “to not follow the procedures outlined” in a memo sent out by the state
Board of Elections. Republican officials have also been tied to efforts to aid
third-party candidates who could siphon votes from Mr. Biden.
The most
visible Republican effort is in the courts. Matthew Morgan, who was promoted to
campaign counsel this summer, had been directing a flurry of election
litigation and challenging attempts to expand mail-in voting. Like Mr. Trump,
he has disparaged mail balloting, claiming without evidence that “universal
vote by mail opens the door to chaos and fraud.”
Election
Day operations are now coordinated by Michael Roman, a Philadelphia native who
once oversaw an operation for the billionaires Charles G. and David H. Koch
that surveilled and gathered information on liberal adversaries. He frequently
airs baseless claims that Democrats are plotting to “steal the election.” Mr.
Roman also played a central role in promoting a 2008 video of two members of
the New Black Panther Party outside of a Philadelphia polling place, one
carrying a baton; the video became a long running flash point for the
right-wing media’s claims of election interference by Democrats.
“This is
somebody who I think has a reputation for hyping and distorting incidents to
make it appear as though Democrats are cheating, and I think it adds to an
overall dangerous message about election rigging,” said Richard L. Hasen, a
professor at the University of California, Irvine School of Law who writes the
widely read Election Law Blog.
Mr. Roman
declined to comment for this article.
Other
notable figures doing work for the campaign include Bob Paduchik, a senior
campaign adviser, who was involved in a secretive operation during the 2004
Bush campaign dubbed the “Voter Reg Fraud Strategy.” The effort was aimed at
challenging the legitimacy of absentee voters, according to emails released in
a lawsuit filed by the Democratic National Committee.
Poll
watching is regulated by differing state laws. In official training videos,
Republicans instruct workers to be courteous to Democrats, dress appropriately
and stay on their toes: “Do not zone out.”
This year,
for the first time in more than three decades, the Republican National Committee
is taking an active role in poll watching, after the courts in 2018 lifted a
consent decree that had barred the R.N.C. from doing so. The ban stemmed from
the committee’s involvement in an operation to intimidate New Jersey voters in
1981.
There are
already signs that Republicans, who have won only one popular presidential vote
since 1988, will be unusually aggressive. In recent weeks, the Trump campaign
sent personnel to attempt to enter satellite facilities in Philadelphia where
voters could pick up and fill out mail-in ballots — offices that are not
regarded as polls. (In an interview, Mr. Morgan pushed back on that concept,
saying: “They say this is not a polling place. To us this sounds absurd, when
you can register, get your ballot and vote in that location. So we don’t accept
that premise.”)
States led
by Republicans are also working to restrict access to voting; in Texas, for
instance, Gov. Greg Abbott last week moved to close many of the locations where
voters can drop off their ballots.
Trump
supporters outside the Fairfax County Government Center during early voting in
Virginia last month. At one point, they formed a line that voters had to walk
around to get to their polling location.Credit...Kenny Holston for The New York
Times
Campaign
officials said they had not been in contact with any outside groups to
encourage or tacitly support unofficial poll watching and protests at polling
sites, beyond the official poll watching activity that typically occurs. And
they were confident there would not be a repeat of the kind of intimidation tactics
that led to the consent decree.
“That’s why
we are recruiting people,” Mr. Clark said. “We are training them, we are
working with them to make sure that they’re doing things the right way.”
Still, Mr.
Trump stirred alarm at the debate last week by equivocating when asked to
condemn the Proud Boys; he only denounced them later amid criticism after the
debate. When asked by The New York Times, the campaign also declined to
renounce such groups.
Frank
Figliuzzi, a former F.B.I. assistant director of counterintelligence, said the
president’s remarks could be interpreted by violent right-wing groups as “a
call to action, a call to arms.” Mr. Figliuzzi said the organizations’ online
communications reveal they are making plans to gather at polling stations.
“There are
specific posts, from Proud Boys, for example, that encourage it,” Mr. Figliuzzi
said during a call held by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a
voting rights group.
Such groups
also point to curiously timed and seemingly alarmist announcements of voting
fraud investigations arising from small incidents. The Justice Department, for
instance, announced it was starting an inquiry after a handful of ballots were
found in a garbage can in Pennsylvania, apparently accidentally discarded by a
contract worker. It was a highly unusual step, coming as the Trump
administration weakened longstanding department policy that discouraged making
voter fraud investigations public before an election.
Like the
Justice Department, Mr. Trump’s campaign is also amplifying his message.
“We’ve all
seen the tweets about voter fraud and blah blah blah,” Mr. Clark said when he
was recorded last year, referring to Mr. Trump’s claims. “Every time we’re in
with him, he asks: ‘What are we doing about voter fraud, what are we doing
about voter fraud?’”
Mr. Clark
added, “He’s committed on this.”
Susan Beachy contributed research.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário