OPINION
THE
EDITORIAL BOARD
This Threat to Democracy Is Hiding in Plain Sight
Sept. 23,
2022
By The
Editorial Board
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/23/opinion/trump-big-lie-elections.html
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
In the
weeks after the 2020 presidential election, Donald Trump and his allies were
unable to get far in their attempts to prove widespread voter fraud. There were
two reasons for that.
First,
there wasn’t any, as numerous investigations by journalists, expert reports and
court rulings showed. But second, Republican election officials in multiple
states repeatedly said that their counts and recounts were accurate, and they
defended the integrity of the election. For all the pressure that the Trump
camp brought to bear, well-trained, civic-minded election workers carried out
their duty to maintain the machinery of American voting.
Many top
Republican Party officials and lawmakers have spent the last two years striking
back, and drawn the most attention for their efforts to pass “voter integrity”
laws that aim to make voting more onerous under the guise of preventing fraud.
From January 2021 to May of this year, just under three dozen restrictive laws
had been passed in nearly 20 states, according to the Brennan Center for
Justice.
These are
pernicious laws, and they undermine Americans’ hard-won rights to vote. But
just as important is the matter of who counts the votes, and who decides which
votes count and which do not.
This is
where Mr. Trump’s allies have focused much of their scheming since his
re-election defeat. Their mission is to take over America’s election
infrastructure, or at least key parts of it, from the ground up by filling key
positions of influence with Trump sympathizers. Rather than threatening
election officials, they will be the election officials — the poll workers and
county commissioners and secretaries of state responsible for overseeing the
casting, counting and certifying of votes.
These
efforts require attention and mobilization from Americans across the political
spectrum. America’s system of voting is complex and decentralized, with most of
the oversight done at the state and local level by thousands of elected and
appointed officials, along with poll workers. While it is outdated and
inconvenient in many places, this system has worked relatively well for roughly
200 years.
But Mr.
Trump’s attempts to subvert the election also revealed the system’s
vulnerabilities, and his allies are now intently focused on exploiting those
pressure points to bend the infrastructure of voting to their advantage. Their
drive to take over election machinery county by county, state by state, is a
reminder that democracy is fragile. The threats to it are not only violent
ruptures like the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol but also quieter efforts to
corrupt it.
A key
element of this strategy is dismantling the bulwarks that stopped the assault
on democracy in 2020. In Georgia, the top state election official, Brad
Raffensperger, its secretary of state, refused Mr. Trump’s request to help
steal the election by agreeing to “find” 11,780 additional votes. In Michigan,
the Board of State Canvassers certified Joe Biden’s victory despite Mr. Trump’s
aggressive meddling. A host of other state and local officials, many of them
Republicans, pushed back on similarly antidemocratic machinations.
Mr. Trump
and his allies have set about removing and replacing these public servants,
through elections and appointments, with more like-minded officials. In some
cases, the effort has failed. (In Georgia’s Republican primary this year, Mr.
Trump backed a losing candidate in a vendetta against Mr. Raffensperger.) But
in other states, Republicans have embraced election deniers as candidates,
including for secretary of state.
In Nevada,
the Republican secretary of state nominee, Jim Marchant, maintains that the
2020 presidential race was rigged and that he would not have certified Mr.
Biden’s win in Nevada. He blames voting fraud for his own failed House run that
year and has said that Nevada voters haven’t truly elected their leaders in
years because the system is so rigged.
Mr.
Marchant is a part of the America First Secretary of State Coalition, whose
candidates are campaigning for measures that would make it more difficult for
Americans to vote, such as by limiting voting to a single day and aggressively
purging voter rolls. They have the financial backing of pro-Trump election
deniers including Mike Lindell, the founder of MyPillow, and Patrick Byrne, the
former chief executive of Overstock.com.
The
Republicans’ pick in Michigan, Kristina Karamo, is also an America First
candidate. She gained political notice with her unsubstantiated claims to have
witnessed election fraud as a poll watcher in Detroit in 2020. She has also
promoted the baseless conspiracy theories that Dominion voting machines flipped
votes in Mr. Biden’s favor and that Jan. 6 was a false flag operation conducted
by “antifa posing as Trump supporters.”
The most
outrageous G.O.P. choice may be Arizona’s Mark Finchem. Mr. Finchem has in the
past identified as a member of the Oath Keepers, a far-right militia group, and
he spoke at a QAnon convention last year. He was at the Capitol on Jan. 6,
although he denies being within about 500 yards of the building. As a member of
the Arizona House of Representatives, he introduced a resolution this year to
decertify the 2020 election in multiple counties, and was a sponsor of a bill
to empower the Republican-led Legislature to overturn election results.
Mr. Finchem
wants to ban early voting and put limits on mail-in voting. In April, he filed
a federal lawsuit, backed by Mr. Lindell, to block the use of electronic
vote-counting machines in Arizona in the midterms. (It was dismissed.)
Installing
election deniers as top election officials is just one element of this plan.
Much less visible, but just as important, is the so-called precinct strategy,
in which Trump allies are recruiting supporters to flood the system by signing
up to work in low-level election positions such as poll workers. A prominent
promoter of the precinct strategy was Steve Bannon, the former Trump adviser.
Last year, Mr. Bannon rallied the listeners of his “War Room” podcast to sign
up as precinct committee members. “We’re going to take this back village by
village … precinct by precinct,” he proclaimed in May 2021.
The call
was answered. An investigation by ProPublica in the summer of 2021 found a
surge in Republicans signing up to be precinct officers or equivalent
lowest-level officials in key counties. Of the 65 counties contacted, 41
reported a collective increase of at least 8,500 new sign-ups following Mr.
Bannon’s call to arms. (ProPublica found no such spike on the Democratic side.)
The
precinct strategy has been endorsed by Mr. Trump — who declared it a way to
“take back our great country from the ground up” — and adopted by segments of
the Republican Party.
“There’s a
stirring of Democratic hearts, a blooming of Democratic hopes, a belief that
falling gas prices, key legislative accomplishments and concern about abortion
rights equal a reprieve from the kind of midterm debacle that Democrats feared
just a month or two ago.”
“So this
constant distilling into the ‘Big Lie’ overlooks something key: A sea change is
slowly happening on the right as it relates to policy expectations.”
“The
reproductive rights side has long had the numbers, just not the intensity. If
Democrats can keep the pressure on, abortion politics could prove increasingly
painful and destructive for Republicans.”
Mr. Bannon
is appealing to his supporters’ sense of civic duty by asking them to be more
involved in their local election process. But unsettling details of what this
effort entails emerged this summer after Politico acquired videos of Republican
operatives discussing strategy with activists.
New
election recruits would attend training workshops on how to challenge voters at
polling places, explained Matthew Seifried, the Republican National Committee’s
election integrity director for Michigan, in one of the recordings. These poll
workers would have access to a hotline and a website staffed by “an army” of
Republican-friendly lawyers prepared to help with challenges. “We’re going to
have more lawyers than we’ve ever recruited, because let’s be honest, that’s
where it’s going to be fought, right?” Mr. Seifried said at a meeting last
October.
As
testimony during the Jan. 6 committee hearings revealed, the legal challenges
presented by Trump allies to the 2020 election quickly collapsed in part
because they lacked even the most basic documentation. But carried out as
designed, the precinct strategy means that even if, ultimately, there are no
instances of fraud and most of the challenges to individual voters fall apart,
they could still bog down the voting by causing delays and introducing
unnecessary friction and confusion, giving cover to a state election official
or state legislature to say that an election is tainted and therefore invalid.
In some
parts of the country, this is already happening. This summer, an all-Republican
county commission in rural New Mexico refused to certify the primary election
results because of unsubstantiated suspicions of fraud. New Mexico’s secretary
of state, a Democrat, intervened and asked the state Supreme Court to order the
commission to certify the results. Two commissioners relented, but the third,
Couy Griffin, refused. He admitted that his suspicion of fraud was not founded
on any evidence: “It’s only based on my gut feeling and my own intuition, and
that’s all I need.”
(Mr.
Griffin, who attended the Jan. 6 melee at the Capitol, was later ruled to be
ineligible to hold office under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which bars
from public office anyone who has sworn an oath to the Constitution and later
engages in insurrection.)
After the
May primary election in Pennsylvania, three Republican-controlled counties
refused to count several hundred mail-in ballots on which voters had failed to
write a date on the envelope. The administration of Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat,
filed suit, and last month, a judge ruled that the ballots had to be included
in the results, finally clearing the way for the primaries to be certified.
(State officials learned of a fourth county that had done something similar.)
Litigation
is an important tool in tackling this threat. But it will not save the day. The
problem is too big, says Marc Elias, a Democratic voting rights lawyer. “For
every one place you try to solve this in court, there are five additional
places where it is happening,” he said.
The real
threat to America’s electoral system is not posed by ineligible voters trying to
cast ballots. It is coming from inside the system.
All those
who value democracy have a role to play in strengthening and supporting the
electoral system that powers it, whatever their party. This involves, first,
taking the threat posed by election deniers seriously and talking to friends
and neighbors about it. It means paying attention to local elections — not just
national ones — and supporting candidates who reject conspiracy theories and
unfounded claims of fraud. It means getting involved in elections as canvassers
or poll watchers or precinct officers. (Mr. Bannon has the right idea about
civic participation; he just employs toxic lies as motivation.)
And it
means voting, in every race on the ballot and in every election. To this end,
employers have a role to play as well, by giving workers time off to vote and
encouraging them to do so.
The task of
safeguarding democracy does not end with one election. Mr. Trump and others
looking to pervert the electoral process are full of intensity and are playing
a long game. Only an equally strong and committed countervailing force will
meet that challenge.

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