Chattanooga Times Free Press

STOLEN ELECTION? NO, DEMOCRATS, IT WASN’T

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It may seem hard to believe, but there remains a hard-core group of partisans who still insist that a presidenti­al election was stolen and that the victor is “illegitima­te.”

Perhaps these conspiracy theorists will finally reconsider in the wake of a new study by New York University which concludes that Russian tweets did little to increase Donald Trump’s vote count in the 2016 presidenti­al balloting.

“We find no evidence of a meaningful relationsh­ip between exposure to the Russian foreign influence campaign and changes in attitudes, polarizati­on or voting behavior,” the study concludes.

In fact, the theory that “Russian meddling” flipped the election to Trump was a fantasy put forth by stunned Democrats as an excuse for Hillary Clinton’s many failures. It then devolved into a bludgeon used to pummel Trump during the four years of his presidency.

In 2018, The New Yorker magazine, no less than the Bible of progressiv­e orthodoxy, ran a lengthy piece by Jane Mayer touting the theory that Clinton had been the victim of a cyberwar conducted by an American enemy in an effort to install Trump in the Oval Office. She credulousl­y quoted James Clapper, former director of national intelligen­ce, as saying that “it stretches credulity to think the Russians didn’t turn the election.”

Yet five years later, the NYU review determined that the Russian “disinforma­tion” campaign was a mere needle buried amid a haystack of election messaging from both Republican­s and Democrats, not to mention the legacy media. The findings are in line with two other academic studies.

“Just 1 percent of Twitter users absorbed about 70 percent of the socalled Russian disinforma­tion,” Robby Soave of Reason wrote this week, “meaning that a tiny fraction of overall users encountere­d actual Russian trolls.” And most of those exposed to this amateur campaign were already supporting Trump, the study determined. The Washington Post noted that “highly partisan Republican­s were exposed to nine times more posts than non-Republican­s.”

In other words, the idea that Trump became president thanks to Russian collusion or “disinforma­tion” on social media is itself “disinforma­tion.” And the entire scheme never could have blossomed without the cooperatio­n of progressiv­e pundits, journalist­s and Clinton herself.

This should be no surprise to those who have been paying attention. In May, a former Clinton campaign manager testified in federal court that Clinton approved of a plan to funnel dubious informatio­n to a Slate reporter claiming Trump had a secret connection to a Russian bank.

“In short, the Clinton campaign created the Trump-Alfa allegation,” The Wall Street Journal concluded, “fed it to a credulous press that failed to confirm the allegation­s but ran with them anyway, then promoted the story as if it was legitimate news.”

Democrats have spent the past two years railing about election denialism as an existentia­l threat to democracy. Perhaps a little more introspect­ion is in order.

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