ELECTIONS
‘It’s spreading’: Phony election fraud
conspiracies infect midterms
Former President Donald Trump’s unfounded claims about
a rigged election have metastasized.
By DAVID
SIDERS and ZACH MONTELLARO
09/20/2021
04:30 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/09/20/election-fraud-conspiracies-infect-midterms-512783
It started
as one big, false claim — that the election was stolen from Donald Trump.
But nearly
a year later, the Big Lie is metastasizing, with Republicans throughout the
country raising the specter of rigged elections in their own campaigns ahead of
the midterms.
The
preemptive spin is everywhere. Last week it was Larry Elder in California, who
— before getting trounced in the GOP’s failed effort to recall Gov. Gavin
Newsom — posted a “Stop Fraud” page on his campaign website. Before that, at a
rally in Virginia, state Sen. Amanda Chase introduced herself as a surrogate
for gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin and told the crowd, “Because the
Democrats like to cheat, you have to cast your vote before they do.” In Nevada,
Adam Laxalt, the former state attorney general running to unseat Democratic Sen.
Catherine Cortez Masto, is already talking about filing lawsuits to “tighten up
the election” — more than a year before votes are cast. And in Pennsylvania,
former Rep. Lou Barletta, who is running for governor after losing a Senate
race two years earlier, said he “had to consider” whether a Republican could
ever win a race again in his state given the current administration of
elections there.
Trump may
have started the election-truther movement. But what was once the province of
an aggrieved former president has spread far beyond him, infecting elections at
every level with vague, unspecified claims that future races are already
rigged. It’s a fiction that’s poised to factor heavily in the midterm elections
and in 2024 — providing Republican candidates with a rallying cry for the
rank-and-file, and priming the electorate for future challenges to races the
GOP may lose.
“The fever
has not broken,” said Benjamin Ginsberg, an elections lawyer who has
represented past Republican presidential nominees. “If anything, it’s
spreading. People I knew as rational and principled feel they have to say our
elections are not reliable because polls show that is the ante for contested
Republican primaries and motivating the base in general elections. California
recall results aside, it comes at the expense of the principle that our leaders
should not make allegations that corrode American democracy without any
credible evidence.”
For
Republicans, the fantasy that Trump did not lose in 2020 but had the election
stolen from him was once viewed as a largely backward-looking concern. Other
than the twice-impeached former president, its most prominent promoters were
Trump’s discredited hangers-on — the Rudy Giulianis, Lin Woods, Mike Lindells
and Sidney Powells of the GOP. But what is animating some in the party today is
different — a political grift to placate base voters and to discredit the
results of races that do not go their way. It’s not simply that a significant
number of House and Senate candidates have supported Trump’s baseless
allegations about the last election. They’re already laying the foundation to
repeat similar claims of their own.
“That is a
simply terrible development for our democracy,” said Trevor Potter, a former
chair of the Federal Election Commission who served as general counsel to
Republican John McCain’s two presidential campaigns.
It may
ultimately be terrible for the Republican Party, too. In Georgia last year,
Trump’s baseless claims about rigged elections depressed Republican turnout in
two critical Senate runoffs, the loss of which cost Republicans their Senate
majority. An erosion in GOP voter confidence in election integrity could once
again persuade some of them to stay home in competitive House and Senate races
next year — and in the presidential race in 2024 — with nothing less than the
balance of power in Washington at risk.
“You pick a
state, you pick an election, you pick a national election, and if we try the
same approach, we will come in the same second place that we just did,” said
Georgia’s Republican lieutenant governor, Geoff Duncan, a Trump critic who is
not seeking reelection. “And that’s code language for ‘lost.’”
The
potential harm was not lost on Republicans in California last week, where, on
the eve of the recall election, Republicans in Orange County issued a plea to
vote that both nodded to — and braced against — concerns about voter fraud:
“This Election Can Only Be Stolen If You Don’t Vote.”
In
Democratic-heavy California, the recall likely wouldn’t have succeeded no matter
what Republicans said about voter fraud. The problem for Republicans everywhere
else is that, for primary audiences, the Trumpian position on the issue is the
only politically acceptable position that they can take. Two-thirds of
Republicans still believe, despite considerable evidence to the contrary, that
Joe Biden was illegitimately elected president. And it’s that untethering from
reality that’s undergirding Republican candidates’ obsession with claims that
the other side cheats.
“There are
normal people, and then there are politicians,” said Stephen Richer, the
Republican recorder of Maricopa County, Ariz., and a fierce critic of the
Arizona state Senate-led review of the 2020 election in his county.
“Politicians are motivated by, I think unfortunately, a different set of
Maslow’s hierarchy [of needs]. And two of those high-ranking factors are
fundraising and followers. And I think the ‘Stop the Steal’ crowd seemingly
plays well for both of them.”
In Arizona,
where a farcical review of November ballots ordered by Republicans is expected
to be made public this week, former TV anchor Kari Lake, who is running for
governor, still insists Trump carried the state and asserts in digital ads that
“our election integrity is wrecked.”
In
Michigan, Garrett Soldano, a Republican candidate for governor, assured
supporters at a rally that “your vote is going to count,” but only because
“there are going to be so many Americans that are watching. … They are not
going to get away with what they got away with this past election in the
future.”
And then
there’s the group of Trump supporters who worked to undermine the 2020 election
and have all launched secretary of state bids in their home states. Trump has
endorsed three of them: Rep. Jody Hice in Georgia, who is primarying incumbent
Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger; Michigan’s Kristina Karamo; and Arizona
state Rep. Mark Finchem, all three of whom have made spreading falsehoods about
Trump’s defeat — and subsequently his endorsement — major parts of their
campaigns and fundraising efforts. If elected, Republicans who sought to
undermine public confidence in the last election will be the very ones
overseeing future contests.
“A good
campaign, especially with survey data, listens to what the electorate wants to
hear and gives it to them,” said John Thomas, a Republican strategist who works
on House campaigns across the country.
If there’s
a price to be paid in depressing general election turnout, he said, “That’s the
double-edged sword, and I don’t think the Republicans have kind of cracked that
nut or figured out how to solve that incongruity yet. It’s hard. It’s real
hard.”
Thomas said
he advises candidates to respond to questions about voter fraud by saying,
“Voting irregularities happen. They’re real. We have to try to strengthen the
integrity of the system when we can. But we have to move more of our people to
the polls than theirs so that we can overcome any of the cheating and
shenanigans they may try in the homestretch. We have to win by such margins,
such a landslide, that there’s no amount of irregularities that could overcome
it.”
It’s possible
that the effect of election fraud rhetoric on turnout next year will not be as
significant as it was in Georgia. The denialism in that state immediately after
the presidential election was especially pronounced, as Republicans there, like
in Arizona, saw their long-red state flip Democratic for the first time in
years.
Midterm
elections traditionally function as a referendum on the sitting president, and
by 2022, Biden will have been in office for two years, with a record for
Republicans to run against. The economy, the coronavirus pandemic or any number
of issues other than election fraud may be top of voters’ minds.
It’s also
possible that by November 2022, Republican voters’ distrust in elections will
subside. One opportunity for that, paradoxically, may come in the fallout from
ongoing, Trump-friendly reviews of the presidential vote in Arizona and other
states. If Trump’s allies can’t prove his claims in Arizona, Ginsberg said,
“they can’t prove them anywhere and election denialism’s potency starts to
fade.”
That’s the
optimistic view, and even Ginsberg’s assessment is that “it would take an
election cycle or two to wash through.” The alternative prospect is more dire —
a proliferation next year of localized versions of Trump’s effort to subvert
the last election. Former New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman, a Republican
and outspoken critic of Trump, said Republicans now spreading false election
claims are trying “to undercut the 2022 and 2024 elections.”
Potter, the
former FEC chair who now heads the nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center, foresees
potential confrontations not only in court, but at polling places in the
midterms and in the next presidential election.
“I think
we’ve got to have Republican candidates who stand up and say, ‘Bunk, there is
no election fraud, we lost the election fair and square,’” said Dick Wadhams, a
former Colorado Republican Party chair and longtime party strategist. “And it’s
time to look at ourselves and why we lost, and it’s because of an incumbent
president who could not restrain himself and handed the White House to the
Democrats and handed the Senate to the Democrats.”
Wadhams,
who voted for Trump both in 2016 and 2020, became so fed up with far-fetched claims
about the 2020 election that he wrote a column in The Denver Post last week
criticizing Republicans who he said were “hell-bent to mire the party in stolen
election conspiracy theories and to alienate the 1.6 million unaffiliated
voters who represent 43% of the electorate” in Colorado.
The day
before the column ran, he said, “This notion that Republicans are never going
to lose an election again, if we lose it’s because it was stolen, No. 1, it
never addresses why we really lose elections, but No. 2, it undermines the
process we’ve had for a couple of hundred years in this nation.”

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