╌>

Inspired by Arizona recount, Trump loyalists push to revisit election results in communities around the country

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  john-russell  •  3 years ago  •  7 comments

Inspired by Arizona recount, Trump loyalists push to revisit election results in communities around the country

The original seeded article is considerably longer than what I posted here so if you have the opportunity check it out. 


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



www.msn.com   /en-us/news/politics/inspired-by-arizona-recount-trump-loyalists-push-to-revisit-election-results-in-communities-around-the-country/ar-AAKaNOQ

Inspired by Arizona recount, Trump loyalists push to revisit election results in communities around the country





At a public meeting last week in Cheboygan County, Mich., a lawyer from Detroit told county commissioners that the voting machines they used in 2020 could “flip” votes and throw an election. She offered to send in a “forensic team,” at no charge to the county, to inspect ballots and scanners.

In Windham, N.H., supporters of former president Donald Trump showed up to a town meeting this month chanting “Stop the Steal!” and demanding that officials choose their preferred auditor to scrutinize a 400-vote discrepancy in a state representative race.

And at a board of supervisors meeting May 4 in San Luis Obispo County, on California’s Central Coast, scores of residents questioned whether election machines had properly counted their votes, with many demanding a “forensic audit.”

The ramifications of Trump’s ceaseless attacks on the 2020 election are increasingly visible throughout the country: In emails, phone calls and public meetings, his supporters are questioning how their elections are administered and pressing public officials to revisit the vote count — wrongly insisting that Trump won the presidential race.

The most prominent example is playing out in Arizona’s Maricopa County, where Republican state lawmakers have forced a widely pilloried audit of the 2020 vote. That recount is being touted as an inspiration by small but vocal cohorts of angry residents in communities in multiple states.

“I think there is clearly a justification to do that type of audit that they’re doing in Maricopa County. That’s what I wanted to see done here,” said Ken Eyring, a local activist in Windham who recently appeared at a rally with former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski. Eyring said his only goal is to make sure Windham’s machines are accurate.

Behind the scenes, a loose network of lawyers, self-styled election experts and political groups is bolstering community efforts by demanding audits, filing lawsuits and pushing unsubstantiated claims that residents are echoing in public meetings. Much of it is playing out in largely Republican communities, where Trump supporters hope to find officials willing to support their inquiries.

The increasingly vocal protests seven months after Trump lost the White House show how deeply the former president has undermined confidence in the nation’s elections, an attack he began early in the 2020 campaign as state and local officials expanded mail voting in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Even as national Republican leaders say they want to move on from the last election — a rationale they used to expel Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), a Trump critic, from her leadership post last week — the widespread echoes of Trump’s lie that the election was stolen show how his supporters are keeping that narrative alive.

Cheering them on is Trump himself, who has been issuing   near-daily statements   from his private Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida, claiming that a cascade of findings that the election was rigged will appear any day.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if they found thousands and thousands and thousands of votes,” Trump recently told a crowd attending a party at Mar-a-Lago, according to a video posted online by an attendee. “So we’re going to watch that very closely. And after that, you’ll watch Pennsylvania and you’ll watch Georgia and you’re going to watch Michigan and Wisconsin. You’re watching New Hampshire. Because this was a rigged election. Everybody knows it.”

So far, other than in Maricopa County, no major post-election audits are underway. But the clamor for them by Trump supporters has renewed pressure on beleaguered local officials — and led many to fear these fights will be a permanent feature of future elections.

“This will continue on for years,” said Gerrid Uzarski, the elections director in Kent County, Mich., whose office has been inundated with angry phone calls from residents accusing his office of allowing fraud to taint the 2020 results. “I’ve left my office in fear a little bit, had to look around and make sure no one was near me, because of the nature of the phone calls. They are so angry, they just come at you, very hateful, not looking for answers but hating you, like you are the problem.”

A Trump spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

Calls for audits spread


Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, said in an interview Wednesday that the push for audits in her state and across the country is nothing short of an assault on democracy.

“It’s a continuation of the same forces that sought to overturn the 2020 election, undermine the counting process and interfere on Jan. 6 with the electoral college certification,” she said. “These forces have now turned to local outreach. And because there has not yet been any real accountability for these bad actors trying to undermine our democracy, we are going to continue to see this activity, particularly in swing states, through 2024.”

Election officials said the possibility of more audits also raises concerns about the security of their equipment in future elections if they are turned over to private companies without federal accreditation, as has happened in Arizona.

This week, officials in Maricopa County had had enough: In a public meeting and follow-up letter, the Republican-majority board of supervisors   decried   the ongoing audit as a “sham” and a “spectacle that is harming all of us.” At the meeting, the board chairman, Republican Jack Sellers, called the recount — for which Trump supporters are raising money — a “grift disguised as an audit.”

Election observers have sharply criticized Cyber Ninjas, the private company hired by the GOP-led state Senate, saying that its methods are haphazard and that it has failed to take basic security steps. The company’s chief executive has echoed baseless claims that fraud tainted the 2020 vote, and he has ties to Trump-allied lawyers who filed suits challenging the election results last year.

“The result is that the Arizona Senate is held up to ridicule in every corner of the globe and our democracy is imperiled,” county officials   wrote .

Undaunted, state Senate President Karen Fann (R)   said   Tuesday that the audit would move forward.

Now, similar endeavors are emerging in other communities.

Most take aim at equipment sold or serviced by Dominion Voting Systems, a Denver-based company that has been the subject of some of Trump’s wildest accusations, including the baseless theories that the company is connected to Hugo Chávez, the late socialist leader of Venezuela. Dominion has so far filed four lawsuits related to the accusations,   including   one against Fox News.

While the company’s machines were used in six states where Trump sought to contest the results, key cities that helped Biden secure his win — such as Philadelphia and Tucson — used different voting equipment.

In San Luis Obispo County, roughly halfway between Los Angeles and San Francisco, more than 100 local residents lodged concerns about the county’s Dominion machines at the May 4 meeting.

Many used similar language. “I do not believe my vote was counted,” said one. “These machines can be used to alter the outcome of elections,” said another.

One woman   prompted an outcry   when she suggested that the county’s top election official, Tommy Gong, was a member of the Communist Party of China. Gong is a third-generation American citizen who has worked for the county clerk’s office for 15 years.

“Is Tommy Gong in any way in relationship to the Chinese Communist Party?” the woman asked in a message left on a public comment line and played aloud at the meeting.

“We were all a little shocked to hear it,” Gong said.

He added that he was bewildered by the sudden skepticism of the election in San Luis Obispo, which Biden won with 55 percent of the vote. Gong said it was not until this year that he ever heard the term “forensic audit,” including when dozens of residents repeated it in public comments to the county board. The term appears   in a lawsuit filed   against California state officials by a group called Election Integrity Project California, alleging without evidence that Dominion’s machines produce inaccurate tallies. The   group’s website’s top feature   is a fundraising pitch to “Join Us Today In Our Fight for Fair, Transparent and Honest Elections.”

A lawyer for the group did not respond to a request for comment.


In fact, a sample recount conducted last fall, required after every election under California law, yielded only a two-vote difference from the machine tally — a typical outcome, Gong said. He noted that no one raised questions about the vote in his county during the canvassing period immediately after the election, the only time that he has the authority under California statute to conduct a review or recount.

The county’s GOP chairman, Randall Jordan, told The Washington Post in an interview Wednesday that he is working with Election Integrity Project California to press for an audit of the 2020 results. He said he does not believe the 2020 vote was rigged but thinks it is essential to restore faith among those who believe voting is a “waste of their time” because of reports of fraud.

“The public has the right to ask for fair and honest elections and not take the word of our officials who have lied to us in the past,” he said.

A long battle in Michigan


Dominion also has been at the center of a long-running fight in Antrim County, Mich., which Trump won with 61 percent of the vote, where a local resident filed suit last year claiming that the election was marred by “material fraud or error.”

The accusations began when the county initially reported on election night that Biden held an unlikely 3,000-vote lead in the conservative jurisdiction; local election officials attributed that figure to human error. The error was quickly corrected, and a hand recount of ballots in December confirmed the corrected outcome — and proved that the scanners had accurately tallied the paper ballots.

But the case caught the attention of Trump, who said in a statement last week: “The number of votes is MASSIVE and determinative. This will prove true in numerous other States.”

On Tuesday, a state judge   dismissed   the lawsuit seeking a new audit of the vote. But like   dozens of legal losses for Trump allies before it , the dismissal is unlikely to tamp down fervor in Antrim, where more than a hundred Trump supporters held a rally earlier in the week that included a float festooned with the words “TRUMP UNITY.”

Discussion of the November election dominated   the last meeting   of the county’s local board of commissioners, on May 6, including when one commissioner made a new proposal that the board seek a “third-party complete forensic audit” of the voter registration rolls of towns within the county, to hunt for possible instances in which people voted twice.

“If you’re listening to these people, you’ll never learn the truth,” said Sheryl Guy, the Republican county clerk in Antrim, who has said since November that the Antrim error did not result from fraud. “It’s very frustrating and exhausting, and there have been moments of being fearful.”

Meanwhile, Trump allies have been pushing similar claims in other Michigan counties.

Stefanie Lambert, a lawyer who represented plaintiffs last fall seeking to overturn the Michigan election results, told a panel of   Cheboygan County commissioners on May 13   that her “expert reports” proving vote manipulation in Antrim provide a mandate for an audit in Cheboygan — and that her team would pay for it.

Trump won Cheboygan, a tiny northern county of about 25,000 that straddles Lakes Michigan and Huron, with 64 percent of the vote.

“Votes can be flipped, which is very concerning, with the Michigan election equipment,” Lambert told the commissioners. “Four votes can go in for one party and be flipped to another.”

She added: “If you don’t have a right to vote and have your vote counted as it’s intended to count, then we don’t have a free country.”



Tags

jrDiscussion - desc
[]
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    3 years ago

These are some of the dumbest people on earth. 

Trump says, they cheated me out of the election , from sea to shining sea, from California to New Hampshire, a conspiracy against him , which would need to involve thousands and thousands of people, took place and deprived him of re-election. 

But the cheating and stealing only took place in Democratic counties and mostly only in counties with a disproportionately minority population. 

-

There is no evidence, whatsoever , of an election conspiracy to cheat Trump. When Trump's crackpot lackeys Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell tried to make a case on a nationally televised press conference the only thing that came out of it was Giuliani's face getting streaked with his melting hair dye. We have in this country, millions of conspiracy addled right wing fruit cakes. When is the rest of the population going to wake up to the obvious dangers of having such a phenomenally ignorant percentage of the population in our midst?

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
2  Kavika     3 years ago

JHC, when are the dimwits going to pull their heads out of their asses. 

They lost the last of the 2020 lawsuits in Michigan two days ago. 

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
3  Trout Giggles    3 years ago

jrSmiley_103_smiley_image.jpg

Will these people ever be satisfied?

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
3.1  Ozzwald  replied to  Trout Giggles @3    3 years ago

Will these people ever be satisfied?

Only when they see this.

MW-HQ309_king_t_20190828114622_ZQ.jpg?uuid=fbfaf360-c9aa-11e9-a09a-9c8e992d421e

 
 
 
Tessylo
Professor Principal
4  Tessylo    3 years ago

You'd have to be a braindead moron to support this insanity . . . oh, wait. . . 

 
 
 
Paula Bartholomew
Professor Participates
5  Paula Bartholomew    3 years ago

Whatever county they decide to push their agenda on should tell them to fuck off and have them escorted by LE to the county line(s) and warned if they return they do so at their own peril.

 
 
 
TᵢG
Professor Principal
6  TᵢG    3 years ago

It is sickening to see so many people capable of accepting as truth that (rigged election) which is merely declared by an authority figure (Trump) and act while ignoring all facts (the results of the electoral system, the results of lawsuits, the results of recounts, ...) to the contrary.

 
 

Who is online




446 visitors