The Denver Post

Yes, Trump’s election fraud claims were proven “baseless” — repeatedly

- By Patricia Murphy Patricia Murphy joined the AJC’S politics team in 2020.

Ihad a bizarre conversati­on with a Republican lawmaker last week. We were talking about the state’s new abortion restrictio­ns, which he supports, but he wanted to talk about something else — the 2020 election.

“Why do you guys always just call it ‘baseless claims of election fraud?’” he asked, referring to the AJC’S descriptio­n of former President Trump’s claims about his 2020 loss in Georgia. “You’ve never gone point by point to prove it was baseless.”

I was shocked at what he said because the AJC’S Mark Niesse and David Wickert spent more than a year cataloging and reporting on every state investigat­ion that did, indeed, show that Trump’s claims of election fraud in Georgia were baseless.

They detailed the lengthy investigat­ion by Attorney General Chris Carr’s office debunking Trump’s false claim in his call with Brad Raffensper­ger that “close to 5,000 dead people voted” in Georgia.

Investigat­ors found that most of the so-called “dead people” were alive and well. A total of four absentee ballots were cast for people who had died — all of them cast by relatives trying to vote as they thought their loved ones would have wanted.

One, a 74-year-old widow, voted Republican for her late husband. “She now realizes that was not the thing to do,” her lawyer said.

State investigat­ors also found no merit to Trump’s claims that thousands of underage teenagers and others who were not registered to vote had cast ballots.

The FBI also investigat­ed Trump’s false claims of fraud at State Farm Arena, where he told Raffensper­ger “maybe 18,000 fake ballots had been brought out of “what looked to be suitcases or trunks ... but they weren’t in voter boxes.”

Bjay Pak, Trump’s U.S. attorney based in Atlanta, told the

Jan. 6 committee in sworn testimony that his office and the FBI interviewe­d State Farm witnesses and concluded that “there was nothing to substantia­te” anything Trump was claiming about fraud there. Also, the “suitcases” Trump talked about were, in fact, ballot boxes.

Bobby Christine, Pak’s replacemen­t as U.S. attorney after Pak resigned under pressure from Trump, agreed and closed the State Farm investigat­ion, telling his staff of the allegation­s on a phone call, “There’s just nothing to them. There’s no there there.”

More false claims spun off more state investigat­ions. In one, the head of the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion told the Georgia Republican Party that there was never enough evidence presented to pursue Trump’s allegation­s of “ballot harvesting.”

The State Board of Elections agreed and voted unanimousl­y in May to dismiss claims, including one from the movie “2000 Mules.”

“Just because something looks compelling doesn’t mean it’s accurate,” said Matt Mashburn, Republican chairman of the State Election Board.

Trump’s lies about election fraud in Georgia are too numerous for one column. Different GOP groups and actors came forward with accusation­s — but none ever produced evidence to back up their suspicions.

At the federal level, the Jan. 6 committee hearings have shown over and over that Trump’s own staff and Cabinet knew Trump’s claims were baseless, too, and told him so.

There was Trump’s attorney general, Bill Barr, describing the many times he told the president and his outside lawyers the theories he was spreading about winning the election were nonsense.

“I told them that it was crazy stuff and they were wasting their time and that it was doing grave, grave disservice to the country,” Barr testified.

Cassidy Hutchinson, one of the youngest aides in the White House, described her horror watching the Capitol violently overrun on Jan. 6 because of Trump’s dishonesty.

Profession­al federal and state investigat­ions and more than 60 court cases have proven that’s the case.

If you’ve lost track of the official tally, the 2020 election wasn’t even close. Joe Biden won the White House by more than 7 million votes, 4.4% of the popular vote, and 74 electoral votes.

But true or not, Trump’s lies about the election not only spawned the attack on the Capitol, they also led to death threats for election workers and elected officials across the country.

Just as dangerous, they’ve eroded people’s trust, not just in their own government, but in each other.

Niesse reported this week that Republican activists are working to disqualify thousands of Georgia voter registrati­ons they’ve deemed to be suspicious.

Language in HB 202, the state’s election law overhaul passed as Trump continued to claim the Georgia election was stolen, empowered any individual citizen to challenge as many registrati­ons of their neighbors as they like. Plenty of people are taking their opportunit­y to do just that.

Trump’s claims were false, but the effect they’ve had on the country sadly has been very real.

And yet, almost like clockwork Friday night, the former president was back in Arizona on a rally stage lying about the 2020 election again.

“I ran twice, I won twice, and I did much better the second time than I did the first. ... And now, I may have to do it again.”

The crowd roared for Trump when he said it. Incredibly, they still seemed to believe every word.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States