Trump
Previews Fall Strategy With Baseless Claims of California Vote Fraud
The
president is using the slow count of mail ballots in California to renew his
effort to cast doubt on election outcomes he doesn’t like, despite a lack of
evidence of any widespread fraud.
Jonathan
SwanMaggie Haberman
By
Jonathan Swan and Maggie Haberman
Jonathan
Swan reported from Washington, and Maggie Haberman from New York.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/08/us/politics/trump-election-fraud-strategy-california.html
June 8,
2026
For
President Trump, any Democratic election victory is suspicious on its face.
Even, apparently, in one of the most liberal cities in America.
“Not
possible for Spencer Pratt to have lost the L.A. runoffs after the big lead he
had,” Mr. Trump wrote on social media on Monday. “3rd World Nation.”
On
election night last Tuesday, Mr. Pratt — the reality-television personality and
Trump-endorsed Republican — led the progressive city councilwoman Nithya Raman
for second place to advance to November’s mayoral runoff, behind the incumbent,
Mayor Karen Bass, who is also a Democrat.
But as
election officials spent the following week counting late-arriving mail
ballots, which were disproportionately from Democrats, Ms. Raman edged ahead of
Mr. Pratt. On Monday evening, The Associated Press said that she had indeed
prevailed.
Such
fleeting Republican leads are common enough to have a name — the “red mirage” —
yet Mr. Trump, as he did in his own 2020 loss, cast the slow count as proof of
theft. By baselessly framing Ms. Raman’s rise as a Democratic scam, Mr. Trump
extended his long-running project to erode public faith in elections — and gave
an unusually clear preview of how he could greet any disappointing results for
his party in November, when control of Congress is at stake.
He has
been anything but subtle about his desire to limit the ability of Democrats to
vote by mail, implying, with no evidence, that simply choosing that widely used
means of casting a ballot is inherently suspect. Addressing a gathering of
Republican lawmakers in March, he said the way to hold their majority was to
pass a strict voter identification law cracking down on mail ballots.
“It’ll
guarantee the midterms,” he told them, warning that failure would bring “big
trouble.”
Privately,
according to one senior adviser, he has pressed aides to find ways to “stop
them stealing it from us.”
What is
striking so far is how little of this has survived contact with reality. Voting
legislation he has championed, the SAVE Act, cleared the House but stalled in
the Senate, where Republicans lack the votes to break a Democratic filibuster.
Among other things, the bill would require proof of U.S. citizenship to
register to vote and would compel states to share voter rolls with the federal
government.
An
executive order he signed in March directing the Department of Homeland
Security to assemble a federal list of eligible voters and barring the Postal
Service from delivering mail ballots to anyone left off it was condemned by
election experts as illegal and drew multiple lawsuits.
Still,
even if Mr. Trump fails to change election laws or processes, he can sow
substantial chaos simply by trying to convince voters that the results were
fraudulent.
More than
five years after his supporters, fueled by lies about a stolen election,
stormed the Capitol to stop the transfer of power, Mr. Trump has tried to
recast Jan. 6, 2021, as a day of “peace,” claiming his supporters were led
astray by F.B.I. officers in a false-flag operation. He has produced no
credible evidence, yet he has pardoned rioters who breached the Capitol and has
entertained paying restitution to some of them, over the objections of even
some in his own party.
His fraud
claims about California could matter especially in November. The House majority
rests on a thin margin, with Republicans holding 218 seats to Democrats’ 213.
After California voters approved Proposition 50 in November — a constitutional
amendment pushed by Gov. Gavin Newsom to permit a redrawing of the state’s
congressional map — Democrats have a chance to flip as many as five
Republican-held seats, potentially enough to take the chamber.
Many of
those seats lie in the same Central Valley and Orange County districts whose
ballots take days or weeks to tally. In other words, the races that may decide
control of Congress could be counted in precisely the slow way Mr. Trump
reflexively calls fraud. Elon Musk has amplified the message, arguing that the
combination of no voter ID and mail-in ballots amounts to legalized fraud.
Mr. Trump
has leveled the same accusation at California’s governor’s race, in which the
Republican Steve Hilton is fighting for the second spot that would set up a
November runoff against the Democrat Xavier Becerra.
After
complaining about “rigged elections” in his Monday social media post, the
president added: “Now they’ll be working on great guy Steve Hilton. Won’t have
results for, possibly, TWO WEEKS, according to officials.”
This
year, California had an unusually competitive primary election for governor,
driving up turnout and raising the stakes of the statewide count. To add to the
issue, many Democrats waited to return their mail ballots as the field shifted
and as some were concerned that Democrats could get locked out of the top two
spots.
Asked
whether Mr. Trump had any evidence to support his claims that the California
elections were being rigged, Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, said
he was “committed to ensuring that Americans have full confidence in the
administration of our elections.” That pledge, she added, is “why millions of
Americans sent him back to the White House,” adding that Mr. Trump would
implement measures to “secure our elections for generations to come.”
During
his losing 2020 campaign, Mr. Trump repeatedly made baseless claims that
mail-in voting was rife with fraud. In that election, Democrats, many of whom
were strictly adhering to pandemic protocols, were much more likely to vote by
mail than Republicans, who tended to prefer to vote in person on Election Day —
a partisan divide that persists today. Yet Mr. Trump’s crusade against mail-in
votes that year alarmed Republican legislative leaders, who privately tried
explaining to him that many of the party’s own voters were older and cast
ballots that way.
Several
states took days to finish counting mail-in ballots in 2020. In Pennsylvania,
Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s share of the vote grew each day, eventually allowing him
to overtake Mr. Trump in the state and win the election.
Since
2020, many states have made significant investments to speed up their abilities
to count mail-in votes quickly. In California, however, it is still common for
it to take days or even weeks before enough votes have been counted for news
organizations to declare a winner.
This
year’s election in California was primed to create even more of a red mirage
effect than normal. Facing late upheaval in the governor’s contest after the
departure from the race of Eric Swalwell, a congressman at the time, many
Democrats waited until the last minute to return their ballots. That meant that
the first ballots to be counted and reported were more Republican than normal,
and the ballots reported after Election Day have been even more Democratic than
is typical.
Paul
Mitchell, vice president of Political Data Inc. in Sacramento and an expert in
California voter turnout, said that his firm’s data showed that the share of
Democratic voters’ ballots being processed has far outpaced the share of
Republican ballots in recent days, and that the distance had widened.
California
sends every regular voter a mail ballot that can be returned at their
convenience. It gives a weeklong grace period for ballots to arrive as long as
they are postmarked by Election Day. The state allows voters registered at old
addresses or those not registered at all to fill out provisional ballots that
become valid if election officials verify their information and deem them
eligible. And it allows voters with mismatched signatures on file to resolve
discrepancies once they are detected.
All of
those provisions make voting easier for residents in California than in many
other states, but they add various checkpoints in the system to ensure
security, each of which costs time.
“In
California and Los Angeles, we have our election laws written in a way that
maximizes participation,” said Mike Sanchez, a spokesman for the Los Angeles
County registrar of voters.
Mr.
Mitchell, who is a Democratic consultant, said that, paradoxically, the most
effective way to speed up California’s count would be to eliminate security
protocols, like cutting ballot signature verification or checks on voter
registration for provisional voters.
“I don’t
think Republicans would want that,” he said.
Other
election experts said that California suffered from logistical problems. Each
of California’s 58 counties is responsible for running its own election, and
many lack sufficient resources to verify mail ballots and count votes quickly.
They may not have enough workers, space or machines to process ballots in quick
order.
State
lawmakers passed at least three bills last year designed to speed up the count,
but the changes seemed to have marginal effect, given where things stood on
Monday, with only about three-quarters of the ballots counted six days after
the election.
The bills
shortened the deadline to finish counting most ballots, to 13 days from 30
days. They also allowed election officials to begin processing ballots earlier
than before and required slightly more frequent updates of results.
But
elections are largely county-funded, and most of California’s counties lack the
resources to keep staff on constant rotation, said Kim Alexander, who runs the
nonpartisan California Voter Foundation.
“We
expect our counties to provide all these services to facilitate elections, and
the state and federal governments aren’t paying their fair share of the cost,”
she said.
Nick
Corasaniti, Christine Zhang, Luke Vrotsos, Jill Cowan and Livia Albeck-Ripka
contributed reporting.
Jonathan
Swan is a White House reporter for The Times, covering the administration of
Donald J. Trump. Contact him securely on Signal: @jonathan.941
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.


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