Texarkana Gazette

Vote-by-mail raising fears of election disinforma­tion

- By Eric Tucker and Amanda Seitz

WASHINGTON — A bitterly partisan debate unfolding on whether more Americans should cast their votes through the mail during a pandemic is provoking online disinforma­tion and conspiracy theories that could undermine trust in the results, even if there are no major problems.

With social distancing guidelines possibly curtailing in-person voting at the polls in November, states are drawing up plans to rely more heavily on a mailin system that has until now seen only limited use.

Historical­ly, there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud through mail-in voting. But social media users are already pushing grandiose theories casting doubt on the method. President Donald Trump has encouraged the skepticism, saying during a televised briefing that “a lot of people cheat with mail-in voting.” On Saturday, he tweeted: “Don’t allow RIGGED ELECTIONS!”

Justice Department officials are concerned foreign adversarie­s could exploit any vulnerabil­ities in the vote-by-mail process, especially since even minor tampering could trigger widespread doubts about the integrity of the vote.

“Is it possible, in particular for a foreign actor, to cause enough mischief in the vote-by-mail process to raise a question in the minds of Americans, particular­ly Americans perhaps whose candidate has lost, that somehow the result of this election is unfair?” Assistant Attorney General John Demers, the department’s top national security official, said in describing a key question confrontin­g law enforcemen­t.

Several disinforma­tion experts said they have not found evidence yet that foreign actors are covertly pushing a false narrative about mail-in voting.

But a sham social media campaign that feeds existing doubts about the U.S. election process would align with the Kremlin’s playbook, said Bret Schafer, a media and digital disinforma­tion fellow at the Alliance for Securing Democracy, a Washington think tank. During the 2016 election, Russia-linked groups polluted American voters’ social media feeds with messages about hot-button topics like race relations, gun laws and immigratio­n.

“You don’t have to hack the vote to hack people’s perception of the vulnerabil­ity of the vote,” he said. “All you need to do is to seed enough doubt about the legitimacy of a vote.”

Only five states currently conduct mailin voting, where a ballot is automatica­lly mailed to every eligible voter.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ This March 10, 2020, file photo shows a King County Election worker wearing gloves while collecting ballots from a drop box in the Washington State primary in Seattle. Washington is a vote-by-mail state.
Associated Press ■ This March 10, 2020, file photo shows a King County Election worker wearing gloves while collecting ballots from a drop box in the Washington State primary in Seattle. Washington is a vote-by-mail state.

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