Royal Oak Tribune

States cite smooth election, despite Trump’s baseless claims

- By Christina A. Cassidy, Anthony Izaguirre and Julie Carr Smyth

ATLANTA » The 2020 election unfolded smoothly across the country and without any widespread irregulari­ties, according to state officials and election experts, a stark contrast to the baseless claims of fraud being leveled by President Donald Trump following his defeat.

Election experts said the large increase in advance voting — 107 million people voting early in person and by mail — helped take pressure off Election Day operations. There were also no incidents of violence at the polls or voter intimidati­on.

“The 2020 general election was one of the smoothest and most well-run elections that we have ever seen, and that is remarkable considerin­g all the challenges,” said Ben Hovland, a Democrat appointed by Trump to serve on the Election Assistance Commission, which works closely with officials on election administra­tion.

Following Democrat Joe Biden’s victory, Trump has sought to discredit the integrity of the election and argued without evidence that the results will be overturned. Republican lawmakers have said the president should be allowed to launch legal challenges, though many of those lawsuits have already been turned away by judges and those that remain do not include evidence of problems that would change the outcome of the race.

In Wisconsin, a battlegrou­nd state where Biden

narrowly edged Trump, top election official Meagan Wolfe said there were no problems with the election reported to her office and no complaints filed alleging any irregulari­ties.

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, said the same was true in her state, which Biden also won.

“Let me be clear — the November elections in Michigan ran as smoothly as ever,” Nessel said, adding that there were no “instances of irregulari­ties in the process of counting the votes, only evidence-free allegation­s, wild speculatio­n, and conspiracy theories.”

Ahead of Election Day, the pandemic upended longstandi­ng voting plans and forced election officials to make systemic changes largely on the fly. They did so with limited federal money to cover increased costs for mail ballots, which take more staff and money to send, process and count.

After problems erupted during spring primaries,

the nation worried whether election officials could pull off a problem-free presidenti­al election during a pandemic while confrontin­g the threat of foreign interferen­ce from sophistica­ted adversarie­s led by Russia.

“In the spring, there were just so many challenges we were facing, and we were just wondering how we were going to manage to do it,” said Larry Norden, an elections expert with the Brennan Center for Justice. “It’s an incredible story.”

Long before a single ballot was cast, Trump raised questions about the integrity of the election and railed against mail voting despite a long history of mail ballots being used successful­ly in this country. At one point, he claimed the only way he could lose was if the election were rigged.

Some states that expanded mail-in voting to make it safer to cast a ballot during the virus outbreak lean Republican and voted for Trump — Nebraska, North Dakota and

Montana. He has raised no concerns about the results there.

On Monday, Attorney General William Barr authorized federal prosecutor­s across the U.S. to probe “substantia­l allegation­s” of voting irregulari­ties.

The groundless claims pushed by Trump and his allies about voting and ballot counting have only intensifie­d since The Associated Press and other news organizati­ons called the race Saturday for Biden, who leads in both the popular vote and in the Electoral College.

Among the many lawsuits filed since Election Day is one in Nevada by the Trump campaign alleging voter fraud. Without explanatio­n, Trump tweeted that the state is “turning out to be a cesspool of Fake Votes.”

Such claims have put pressure on Republican election officials fielding scores of reports of fraud that so far have turned out to be human error or limited in scope.

Nevada Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske, a Republican, said her office wouldn’t quantify how many complaints it had received, adding, “Many voter fraud complaints lack any evidence and are more complaints about process or policy.”

In Iowa, Secretary of State Paul Pate, a Republican, ordered all counties in the state to double-check results after a data entry error was discovered in one precinct.

“These human errors are unfortunat­e and frustratin­g, but the system is working,” he said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? In this Tuesday, Nov. 3, file photo, Johnea Barlow casts her ballot at the Kentucky Center for African American Heritage, on Election Day in Louisville, Ky.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO In this Tuesday, Nov. 3, file photo, Johnea Barlow casts her ballot at the Kentucky Center for African American Heritage, on Election Day in Louisville, Ky.

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