Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ballot backdating would have no effect

- Eric Litke Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN

A U.S. Postal Service contractor working in Wisconsin during the election claims USPS workers told him about 100,000 “missing” ballots and a move to backdate ballots.

The claims from this purported whistleblo­wer are being trumpeted by an array of conservati­ve news outlets and personalit­ies — including President Donald Trump — amid the ongoing effort to discredit and overturn election results in Wisconsin. Claims of widespread voter fraud across the U.S. have been presented without evidence and led to a string of defeats in court.

But this claim carries a noteworthy bit of absurdity — even if it were 100% true, it would not have altered the Wisconsin election results by a single vote.

Ethan Pease, a temporary employee of a subcontrac­tor, told his story shortly after the election, but it has found renewed life after he appeared at a Dec. 1 news conference in Arlington, Virginia, then made appearance­s on Fox News with Sean Hannity and Fox Business with Lou Dobbs. Trump posted the news conference video on his YouTube channel.

Various write-ups of this claim appeared on an array of conservati­ve websites and were widely shared on Facebook. These stories were flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its News Feed.

Many narratives citing Pease connect his claim to improperly counted votes.

Dobbs introduced Pease as a man who “has come forward charging postal workers backdated 100,000 mail-in ballots so they could be illegally counted.” The Lutchman Report website said ballots were backdated “so that the ballots would be counted even if they arrived after the statutory deadline.”

But that’s simply not possible — the Wisconsin deadline is based on when ballots are received, not postmarked.

Let’s dig into the details.

Pease’s allegation

Pease’s claim — sworn to in an affidavit that is being used in a lawsuit challengin­g the election results — is based on two conversati­ons he had with USPS workers while filling a delivery role around the election.

Pease said he started his job Aug. 26 as a temporary employee with United Mailing Services, working as a route and box truck driver in the Madison area. His job was to pick up mail and bring it back to UMS, which then sorted it so he could drive the sorted mail to USPS. That mail included ballots housed in separate bins.

Here’s Pease’s descriptio­n of the interactio­ns the day after the Nov. 3 election.

“Nov. 4, I was asked by a senior USPS employee named Monte if I had forgotten any ballots the night before. Monte explained that an order came down from the Wisconsin-Illinois chapter of USPS that 100,000 ballots were missing. Monte then told me that his post office had dispatched employees to look for the missing ballots around 4 a.m., and that only seven or eight were found at UMS. Based on my previous experience and habit of double-checking for ballots, I believed that to be a lie.

The following day, Nov. 5, 2020, I had a conversati­on with a different USPS employee named Rachel, in which she admitted USPS employees were ordered to backdate ballots that were received too late to be lawfully counted.”

At this point we can’t address the validity

PolitiFact on WTMJ-TV

You can watch PolitiFact Wisconsin segments on Wednesday and Friday evenings during the 4 p.m. newscast on WTMJ-TV Milwaukee.

of Pease’s claims, though it’s noteworthy they come from a temporary employee of a subcontrac­tor based on his interpreta­tion of conversati­ons, not any direct observatio­n.

The USPS did not immediatel­y respond to an email asking if they are investigat­ing the matter.

But we do know this had no impact on the election results.

No impact on election results

The widely shared social media posts built around Pease generally connect his claims to illegally counting those votes, though Pease never made that claim himself in the news conference­s or Fox appearance­s.

And that connection is fraught with logical impossibil­ities.

The biggest by far is a fundamenta­l misunderst­anding of the Wisconsin voting deadline.

An array of litigation on absentee ballots in Wisconsin ended Oct. 26 with the U.S. Supreme Court ruling absentee ballots would only be counted if they were returned by Election Day — upholding previous practice. Democrats and other nonpartisa­n groups had sought changes allowing ballots to be counted if they were postmarked by Election Day, even if they were received later.

So local election workers across the state only counted absentee ballots that were submitted by the time polls closed on Election Day.

The entirety of Pease’s allegation­s involve actions taken Nov. 4 and 5. In terms of the vote tally, it doesn’t matter what USPS employees did with ballots at that point. No election officials were going to count them. And the entire state had already reported its election results (Milwaukee County was last about 4 a.m. Nov. 4)

In Madison, where Pease worked, the last election results were reported the night of the election.

Reid Magney, spokesman for the Wisconsin Elections Commission, summed it up this way, addressing Pease’s claims:

“In Wisconsin, no ballots received after 8 p.m. on Tuesday, November 3, could be counted, period. It doesn’t matter when they were postmarked. This was extensivel­y litigated in federal courts in the weeks prior to the election and everyone, including the post office, knew that postmarks were immaterial to whether ballots were counted in Wisconsin.”

We should also note that some conspiracy theories online connect the timing of Pease’s comment — a ballot search at 4 a.m. Nov. 4 — to the “vote dump” claims that allege a jump in votes for Democrat Joe Biden in the wee hours of Nov. 4 is somehow questionab­le. The vote dump claim has been repeatedly debunked: The increase in votes was simply when the City of Milwaukee finished counting its absentee ballots, which were predictabl­y heavily in Biden’s favor.

But the connection is illogical on its face as well. It’s ridiculous to assert a jump in reported votes occurred at the same time employees were searching for ballots across an array of facilities. That supposed correlatio­n leaves no time for ballots to be transporte­d to election officials, verified, counted and added to tallies.

Our ruling

An array of social media posts have seized on statements from a “whistleblo­wer” to say the USPS backdated 100K ballots so they could be counted illegally.

We can’t yet gauge the validity of the backdating claims, but we do know it’s ridiculous to say this affected the Wisconsin vote totals.

Absentee ballots had to be received by the time polls closed on Election Day to be counted, and all state election results were reported by the early morning hours of Nov. 4. Pease’s claims relate to actions allegedly taken Nov. 4 and 5. Whatever happened to ballots then, no one was going to count and include them.

We rate this claim False.

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