Trump attacks mail-in voting with new series of
false claims
President suggests foreign countries will print
millions of ballots and send them to voters
Donald
Trump has been issuing false claims about mail-in voting for months, amid
concerns he is laying the groundwork to contest the election.
Sam Levine
in New York
Published
onMon 22 Jun 2020 22.18 BST
Donald
Trump launched a fresh attack on mail-in voting on Monday, making a series of
false allegations to suggest the 2020 election will be tainted by fraud.
The
president has been advancing untrue claims about mail-in balloting for months,
fueling concerns he is laying the groundwork to contest the results of the 2020
election.
On Monday,
he put forward a new theory, claiming that foreign countries would print
millions of mail-in ballots and mail them to voters.
The idea
was previously advanced by US attorney general William Barr earlier this month
and the attorney general repeated it in a television interview on Sunday.
Trump made
the claims after reports he was seething after a campaign rally in Tulsa,
Oklahoma, where attendance was far below what his campaign had projected. Trump
told the Politico news site last week that expanding vote-by-mail was his
“biggest risk” as he seeks re-election.
Experts
have said that it would be nearly impossible for a foreign country to
orchestrate the kind of fraud Trump and Barr are hyping.
Many
election offices have systems in place to closely track mail-in ballots and
have other methods of verifying the identity of a voter such as comparing the
signature on the ballot to ones on file.
“There are
many checks and balances in place to ensure that nobody could just print
‘millions’ of ballots and vote them,” said David Becker, executive director of
the Center for Election Innovation and Research, who works with election
officials across the country.
“We have
decades of experience enforcing these security measures, including during world
war II, confirming the integrity of mail voting. That’s why election officials
from both parties, including most Republicans, promote mail voting and vote by
mail themselves.”
Different
jurisdictions are required to print ballots with different combinations of
races and layouts, depending on where a voter lives. There can even be specific
paper stocks required for ballots – all measures that would make it extremely
difficult for a foreign power to simply print and mail out ballots.
In Wake
county, North Carolina, for example, there are nearly 100 different ballots for
voters this fall depending on where they live, tweeted Gerry Cohen, a member of
the county board of election. All of mail-in ballots are examined at a public
meeting by all five members of the county board, he added.
“It’s
ridiculous. You can’t just print ballots. There is a specific process with
vendors or internal to election offices. Ballot tracking is a way that you can
add security,” said Amber McReynolds, CEO of the National Vote at Home
Institute and a former election official in Denver. “If either Barr or Trump
had toured an election office or had advisers that know the process, they would
know this is not feasible.”
In a
separate tweet on Monday, Trump pointed to the fact that Americans have voted
during times of war to suggest that Covid-19 was merely being used as an excuse
to “cheat”. But members of the military have long voted by mail and there is a
long history of expanding access to the ballot because of war, Alexander
Keyssar, a historian who has studied elections, told NBC News in April.
Trump has
continued to attack voting by mail even though he and other members of his
administration have frequently used it. On Monday, Business Insider reported
that the vice-president, Mike Pence, and his wife, Karen, voted in the Indiana
primary this month using the Indiana governor’s mansion as their address. Pence
had done the same in 2018.
Indiana’s
constitution says that someone does not lose their residency if they are called
away from the state on federal service, said Ian Hauer, a spokesman for the
Indiana secretary of state, Connie Lawson. A Pence spokesman tweeted that the
governor’s mansion was still the legally correct address for the Pences to vote
absentee.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário