الوسم: fraud

  • ‘Entirely normal’: Why counting US votes takes time, is not a sign of fraud | US Election 2024 News

    ‘Entirely normal’: Why counting US votes takes time, is not a sign of fraud | US Election 2024 News

    Just hours after the polls closed in the 2020 United States presidential election, as millions of votes were still being counted, Donald Trump delivered an extraordinary address.

    “We were getting ready to win this election – frankly, we did win this election,” the then-president told reporters in the early morning hours after Election Day, alleging that “a major fraud” was being committed.

    “We want all voting to stop. We don’t want them to find any ballots at 4 o’clock in the morning and add them to the list,” he said.

    Trump’s premature — and false — claim of victory over his Democratic challenger Joe Biden, who ultimately won the 2020 election, capped weeks of untrue voter fraud allegations made by the Republican incumbent.

    Four years later, as the 2024 race between Trump and Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris remains too close to call, experts again are stressing that it could take days to count the votes — and that is not a sign of malfeasance.

    “Just like in 2020, it’s entirely normal for vote counting to take several days,” said Sophia Lin Lakin, director of the voting rights project at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

    That’s especially true “in closely contested states where things are going to be scrutinised and you’re going to have to count a lot of votes before you’re going to have a sense of who’s going to win those states”.

    “It’s going to take time, and that’s due to built-in verification steps in the counting process to ensure accuracy,” she told Al Jazeera.

    Different procedures

    Vote counting takes time in the US for a variety of reasons, including how elections are administered and how ballots are processed.

    Each US state runs elections its own way, and as a result, each state’s vote count takes a different amount of time, explained Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, a professor of law at Stetson University College of Law in Florida.

    For example, the battleground states of Pennsylvania and Wisconsin do not allow mail-in ballots to be processed before Election Day, meaning their respective counts will likely take longer.

    “Others get a head start by starting the counting process earlier during the early voting period,” Torres-Spelliscy told Al Jazeera in an email.

    “And states have vastly different population sizes. Wyoming has a tiny population while California has more people living in it than Canada. The bigger the population of voters, the longer it takes to count their ballots, which can number in the millions.”

    Meanwhile, states also must sort through what are known as provisional ballots. These are ballots cast by people whose voter registration status must first be verified before their vote is counted, thereby taking a little bit longer.

    Ultimately, that it can take hours — or even days — after Election Day to count votes is not a sign of any illegal act, Torres-Spelliscy said. “Just because it takes a populous state a few days to count millions of votes is not evidence of fraud.”

    Misperceptions, misinformation

    Still, misinformation can quickly spread in the time it takes to tabulate the votes — and between when the polls close and when a projected winner is announced.

    While states can take weeks to release their official vote tallies, US media organisations make projections based on their own methodologies as well as preliminary results.

    This “election call” — a news outlet announcing a projected presidential winner — can happen on election night. But in closer contests, such as the 2020 race between Trump and Biden, it can take a few days.

    Most polling leading up to Election Day this year showed Harris and Trump locked in a race that is too close to call and will likely come down to how the candidates fare in seven critical battleground states: Pennsylvania, Georgia, North Carolina, Michigan, Arizona, Wisconsin and Nevada.

    The potential for misinformation in this period is especially high in a polarised nation where Trump has now spent years claiming that the 2020 election was stolen from him and the electoral system overall is rife with fraud.

    Those beliefs are held by many Americans: According to a September 2023 survey by the Public Religion Research Institute, 66 percent of Republican voters said they believed the “Big Lie” that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump.

    A phenomenon known as the “Blue Shift” can also add to false perceptions that something nefarious is going on, as it did in 2020.

    The term refers to a moment in US elections when the results begin to shift in favour of Democrats as more mail-in ballots get counted throughout the day. Generally, more Democratic voters have voted by mail than Republicans, but it remains to be seen if that will again be the case this year.

    In 2020, Trump “used that change in the numbers over the course of the day … to create this idea that something was wrong”, Lakin at the ACLU said.

    “But it was the normal processing of ballots; it was just a feature of the way people were opting to vote in that particular year.”

    ‘Yelling fraud and irregularity’

    Despite myriad experts debunking Trump’s fraud claims, the former president has continued to make false allegations throughout the 2024 race.

    On the campaign trail, the former president repeatedly warned of voter fraud, including the prospect that noncitizens were voting as part of a Democratic plot to skew the results in Harris’s favour — a claim experts have slammed as untrue.

    His team has filed a number of lawsuits related to alleged irregularities on voter rolls, the lists of people who are eligible to cast ballots.

    And Trump also embraced the slogan “too big to rig” to urge his supporters to vote in numbers large enough to “guarantee we win by more than the margin of fraud”.

    “He’s already sort of announced that he’s the winner before the ballots have even been counted. This is the same claim that he made in 2020: If he’s not the winner of the official count, it can only be because of fraud,” said James Gardner, a professor at the University of Buffalo School of Law in New York state.

    “He has already laid the groundwork for yelling fraud and irregularity just because he might not win. If that’s your starting point, the fact that it takes a while to count the ballots is only one of a million different things that you can say.”

    According to Gardner, “the root of the problem is that the Republican Party under Trump is not willing to play by the rules of democracy.

    “It believes that it deserves to be in power regardless of electoral outcomes. So as a result, it does not adhere to any of the ethics of democratic fair play. Democracy is based on fair rules of fair competition, and the Trump Republican Party is not committed to those.”

    Potential for violence

    Torres-Spelliscy noted that even if Trump does say he won before all the votes are counted, that type of pronouncement “makes no difference legally”.

    “What matters is who states and DC certify and which candidate wins 270 Electoral College votes,” she explained.

    Still, if Trump prematurely declares victory over Harris and is ultimately found to have lost after the votes are counted, that would add to the distrust, anger and feelings of injustice that already permeate among many of the former president’s supporters.

    “What’s going to happen this time — what’s already happening — is that there’s going to be all kinds of outlandish claims made through the media, and that will at the very least inflame Trump’s supporters,” Gardner said. “And who knows what they’ll do.”

    Amid Trump’s false fraud claims after the 2020 vote, a mob of his supporters stormed the US Capitol in Washington, DC, to try to stop Congress from certifying Biden’s election victory.

    The January 6, 2021, insurrection continues to reverberate across the country, Lakin said, as the false claims of a stolen election “created this huge divide in this country and ultimately led to violence”.

    “That would be unfortunate if that were to happen again,” she said. “It would be a travesty for democracy if we can’t figure out how to return to a peaceful transfer of power.”

  • America Pac was warned about Trump ground game fraud months ago | US elections 2024

    America Pac, the political action committee founded by Elon Musk that has led the ground game operation for Donald Trump’s campaign, was warned in September about increasing numbers of door knocks being flagged as potentially fraudulent, according to three people familiar with the matter.

    The confrontation marked the first time that America Pac’s leadership became aware of the problem – canvassers falsely claiming to have knocked on doors – that has raised the possibility that thousands of Trump voters might not be reached by the field operation.

    The question of whether Trump voters are being reached by the America Pac ground game effort has taken on significance in recent months given the race between the former president and Kamala Harris has remained extremely close, suggesting the result may hinge on voter turnout.

    As America Pac rapidly sought to scale up its field operation on behalf of the Trump campaign in late fall, executives at some of the canvassing vendors contracted to knock on doors in battleground states observed that internal audit systems were increasingly flagging doors as suspicious.

    map of number of electoral college votes by US state

    The executives were seeing the uptick both through the “unusual activity logs” on the Campaign Sidekick software used by America Pac and their managers in the field spotting fraud by canvassers on door knocks teams across several states, including Pennsylvania.

    By 24 September, the situation had so alarmed Drew Ryun, the chief executive of Sidekick, that he raised the issue via email with Musk’s newly hired political adviser Chris Young, a former national field director for the Republican National Committee, the people said.

    Whether any changes were implemented as a result is unclear. A review of the unusual activity logs in Arizona and Nevada for instance showed that the percentage of potentially fraudulent doors remained constant in the period before and after Ryun’s missive, hovering around 20-25% with occasional spikes.

    America Pac has previously disputed that their doors were falling victim to its canvassers cheating their way through walkbooks, a problem that has dogged the paid canvassing industry for years, saying their audit program essentially prevented door knocks being faked.

    But the Guardian has reported that tens of thousands of door knocks in Arizona and Nevada, for instance, remain dubious based on the unusual activity logs. In one instance, GPS data showed a canvasser sitting at a restaurant half a mile away from doors he was supposedly hitting in Arizona.

    As a result of that reporting, America Pac moved to restrict access to the unusual activity logs and toggled off the feature for dozens of users, who promptly complained and ultimately had their user privileges restored, two of the people said.

    A Trump spokesperson could not immediately be reached for comment.

    The problem of suspicious door knocks in the America Pac field operation underscores the risk of outsourcing a ground-game program, where paid canvassers are typically not as invested in their candidate’s victory compared with traditional volunteers or campaign staff​.

    With the Trump campaign targeting their low-propensity voters – Trump supporters who have not voted in several previous elections – the walkbooks have had what canvassers refer to as “bad turf”, where target doors are separated by particularly large distances that are tedious to complete.

    Musk donated $75m to America Pac, according to federal disclosures. Roughly $37m has been spent on the ground game operation to drive the Trump vote, with the rest put towards digital and mail advertising for him, as well as for down-ballot Republican candidates.

    map of presidential results in 2024 battleground states in 2008, 2012, 2016 and 2020

    The billionaire owner of SpaceX has also been trying to return Trump to the White House in other ways, notably through a petition that asks registered voters in battleground states to submit their address, phone number and emails in exchange for $47 and to enter a daily-$1m prize draw.

    Some campaign finance lawyers and the US justice department have warned Musk that the America Pac petition offer is illegal as it amounts to paying people to register to vote in violation of federal law. America Pac has also been used by Philadelphia district attorney, Larry Krasner.

    Musk’s defenders say it is simply a contest open to registered voters; in theory, Democrats registered to vote in battleground states can complete the petition and have a chance to win the $1m lottery.

  • US agencies allege Russia link to video falsely claiming Georgia vote fraud | US Election 2024 News

    US agencies allege Russia link to video falsely claiming Georgia vote fraud | US Election 2024 News

    Russia denies the claims as ‘baseless’ and ‘malicious slander’, says it respects ‘the will of the American people’.

    Intelligence agencies in the United States have accused “Russian influence actors” over a video that falsely claimed election fraud was taking place in the battleground state of Georgia, days before the country’s knife-edge presidential vote.

    The video began circulating on X, the social media platform owned by billionaire Elon Musk – a staunch supporter of Republican candidate Donald Trump – on Thursday afternoon. It claims to show a Haitian immigrant with multiple Georgia IDs who says he is planning to vote multiple times in two counties.

    In a joint statement issued on Friday, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said “Russian influence actors manufactured a recent video that falsely depicted individuals claiming to be from Haiti and voting illegally” in Georgia.

    “This judgment is based on information available to the IC [intelligence community] and prior activities of other Russian influence actors, including videos and other disinformation activities,” the agencies said

    The activity is “part of Moscow’s broader effort to raise unfounded questions about the integrity of the US election and stoke divisions among Americans”, the statement alleged.

    Russia, which has previously dismissed as absurd US intelligence claims that it is seeking to meddle in the November 5 election, on Saturday called the latest allegations “baseless”.

    Russia’s embassy in the US said it “has not received either any proof for these claims during its communications with US officials, or any inquiries regarding the narrative being promoted by the press” in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.

    “As President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly stressed, we respect the will of the American people. All insinuations about ‘Russian machinations’ are malicious slander, invented for use in the internal political struggles” in the US, Moscow’s mission said.

    It described as an “unfortunate tradition” that US authorities and media “descend into hysteria about ‘Russian disinformation and interference’, attempting to attribute any problems to external influence”.

    Earlier on Friday, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said his state has been targeted with a video that is “obviously fake”.

    He added that the clip is likely the product of Russian trolls “attempting to sow discord and chaos on the eve of the election”, calling on social media companies to remove it from their platforms.

    The original video was no longer on X on Friday morning, but copycat versions were still being shared widely.

    An analysis of the information on two of the IDs in the video confirmed it did not match any registered voters in the counties, The Associated Press news agency reported.

    Trump and his running mate, Senator JD Vance, have previously spread false rumours about Haitian migrants eating pets in the town of Springfield.

    Trump referenced the claims during an election debate against his rival, Democrat Kamala Harris, in September viewed by tens of millions of people. Following that, Springfield saw dozens of bomb threats that forced evacuations and public building closures, as well as the cancellation of a diversity festival.

    Opinion polls, both nationwide and in the seven closely divided battleground states, suggest Trump virtually tied with Harris, with four days to go before Election Day. More than 66 million people have already cast early ballots.