Russian claims on U.S. mail-in voting raise alarm
Russia is seeking “to undermine public trust in the electoral process” by spreading claims that mail-in-ballots are riddled with fraud and susceptible to manipulation, according to a new intelligence bulletin by the Department of Homeland Security.
Many of the claims made by Russian sources are identical to public statements aired by President Donald Trump and Attorney General William Barr, who have said that mailed ballots aren’t trustworthy while warning of the potential for rampant fraud in November’s elections.
Homeland Security’s intelligence office has assessed that Russian actors “are likely to promote allegations of corruption, system failure, and foreign malign interference to sow distrust in Democratic institutions and election outcomes,” the bulletin states. Russia spreads these claims through a network of state-controlled media, proxy websites and social media trolls, it adds.
The document doesn’t identify any of those media sources by name. But current and former officials who have seen it said the assessment is based in part on classified intelligence about the Russian government’s efforts to interfere with the 2020 elections, in a repeat of its operations four years ago, which intelligence agencies have concluded were designed to help Trump win.
The intelligence on Russian efforts to undermine voting-by-mail has been assessed as credible and was deemed important enough to share in an unclassified form on Thursday with state and local officials so that they can take steps to protect elections from manipulation, the current and former officials said. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because the information was not intended to be shared publicly.
The bulletin doesn’t cite any particular statements by Trump, Barr or other U.S. officials, but it states that Russia is “amplifying” claims that mailin-voting is prone to fraud.
On Wednesday, Barr said in an interview with CNN that “elections that have been held with mail have found substantial fraud and coercion.” Barr pointed to a case in Texas in which he said the U.S. had indicted someone who had collected 1,700 ballots from eligible voters and “made them out and voted for the person he wanted to.” But federal prosecutors brought no such indictment.
ABC News first reported on the Homeland Security bulletin Thursday.
Russia may also have tried to undermine confidence among Black voters, the bulletin states. Russian media sites and their proxies “highlighted reductions in the number of in-person polling places in large cities due to the pandemic and the long lines this caused, claiming this would disproportionately suppress voting among African Americans and expose them to the spread of covid-19,” the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.
A spokesperson for the department’s intelligence office, who would not comment directly on the bulletin, said that “foreign influence activities designed to manipulate American audiences are among the most challenging threats facing our country.”
“We continue to release intelligence on foreign influence activities — we never stopped — including those targeting U.S. elections and democratic processes, with a constant commitment to doing so with increased timeliness, quality, and quantity,” the spokesperson said.
Democratic lawmakers criticized the statement for appearing to equate Russia’s covert intelligence operations with overt political efforts by China to influence U.S. policy positions. Lawmakers who have seen classified intelligence said China’s efforts aren’t comparable to Russia’s attempts to manipulate and mislead voters.
Russia has been trying to undermine mail-in-balloting for at least the past six months, according to the Homeland Security bulletin.
Russia is also exploiting concerns that mail carriers may be unable to handle a deluge of mail-in and absentee ballots, according to the bulletin. “These websites also alleged that vote-by-mail processes would overburden the U.S. Postal Service and local boards of election, delaying vote tabulation and creating more opportunities for fraud and error.”