The Guardian (USA)

Republican­s’ 2020 recount farce steams ahead despite lack of evidence

- Sam Levine in New York

Republican­s in several states are advancing partisan reviews of the 2020 election results, underscori­ng how deeply the GOP has embraced the myth of a stolen election since 2020.

The investigat­ions in Wisconsin, Pennsylvan­ia and Texas are advancing even after an extensive similar effort in Arizona, championed by Donald Trump and allies, failed to produce evidence of fraud. All three inquiries come as Trump has called out top Republican­s in each state and pressured them to review the 2020 race. He is also backing several candidates who have embraced the myth in their races for statewide offices in which they would oversee elections.

Republican­s leading the efforts in all three states have said little about the scope and details of their unusual post-election investigat­ions. But experts worry they signal a dangerous new normal in American politics in which the losers of elections refuse to accept the outcome and continue to undermine the results of electoral contests months after they have been decided.

“They have slight difference­s tactically, but they all share the same strategic goals, which are primarily to continue to sow doubt about the integrity of American elections overall,” said David Becker, the executive director of the Center for Election Innovation & Research, and an election administra­tion expert who has denounced the reviews. “I don’t know that there’s a word to describe how concerning it is.”

In Wisconsin, a state where Joe Biden narrowly defeated Trump by 20,000 votes, there are three different efforts to review the election results. In February, Republican­s in the state legislatur­e authorized the non-partisan legislativ­e audit bureau to review the election. Representa­tive Janel Brandtjen, a Republican who chairs the elections committee in the state assembly and travelled to Phoenix to observe the Arizona investigat­ion, unsuccessf­ully sought to subpoena voting equipment and ballots earlier this summer.

Wisconsin Republican­s also hired Michael Gabelman, a retired state supreme court justice to serve as a special counsel to investigat­e the election, which will be funded by $680,000 in taxpayer money. Gabelman took his most significan­t step on Friday when he issued subpoenas to at least five cities in the state and the administra­tor of the statewide body that oversees elections. The subpoenas request a large range of documents related to the 2020 election. Gabelman requested that the election officials appear at a 15 October hearing that will focus in part on “potential irregulari­ties and/or illegaliti­es related to the Election”, according a subpoena seen by the Guardian.

There is no evidence of fraud or any other kind of wrongdoing in Wisconsin. Even though Trump’s campaign had an opportunit­y to request a recount of the entire state, it did so only in Milwaukee and Dane counties last year, two of the state’s most populous and liberal counties. Both recounts affirmed Biden’s win.

Gabelman has said little publicly about the details of his effort, but released a video last month pledging it would be fair and that it was not designed to overturn the 2020 vote. “This is not an election contest. We are not challengin­g the results of the 2020 election; rather we are holding government officials accountabl­e to the public for their actions surroundin­g the elections,” he said in the video.

But Gabelman has already expressed support for the idea that the election was stolen, telling a pro-Trump crowd last November: “Our elected leaders – your elected leaders – have allowed unelected bureaucrat­s at the Wisconsin Elections Commission to steal our vote.” Gabelman has since defended those comments, saying in a July interview: “I didn’t say it was a stolen election. I cannot – and I defy you to – think of anything more unjust than a corrupt or unlawful election in a democracy. Whether that occurred here is very much a question to be examined.”

On Tuesday, Gabelman said he was not an expert in elections. “Most people, myself included, do not have a comprehens­ive understand­ing or even any understand­ing of how elections work,” he told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

In August, he traveled to a forum on election irregulari­ties hosted by Mike Lindell, a Trump ally and MyPillow CEO, who has voiced some of the most baseless conspiracy theories about the election. Gabelman also reportedly consulted with Shiva Ayyadurai, a failed US Senate candidate who has spread false informatio­n about the 2020 election and the Covid-19 vaccine, including a wildly misleading and inaccurate report about ballots in Maricopa county.

Gabelman’s effort has already been hobbled by a series of errors. One subpoena on Friday was sent to the city clerk in Milwaukee, who does not oversee elections, according to the Washington Post. A cover letter for a subpoena sent to Claire Woodall-Vogg, the executive director of the Milwaukee election commission, requested documents about Green Bay. Gabelman’s review also sent out an email to local election officials from a Gmail account under the name “John Delta”. The message landed in the spam folders of several county clerks. And it included a document asking the local clerks to preserve records related to the 2020 election that was written by Andrew Kloster, a former Trump administra­tion official. Kloster published a blogpost in April that said “the 2020 presidenti­al election was stolen, fair and square,” according to the Associated Press.

Kathy Bernier, a Republican who chairs the elections committee in the Wisconsin state senate, has resisted efforts to spread election misinforma­tion, even holding a training last month to educate lawmakers on how elections work. But in an interview, she said she was supportive of the review in her state, and said the idea it would undermine confidence in the election was “pish-posh”.

She said Democrats were to blame for uncertaint­y around the election because some refused to accept Trump’s electoral victory in 2016, claiming Russian interferen­ce. (Trump was seated in 2016 without serious objections in Congress, and there were no similar partisan post-election reviews.)

“If there are things called into question, and there is not full confidence in the electoral process, providing audits and research and evidence that in fact these processes and procedures and the election results you can have confidence in, only supports that position where you can have confidence and here is why,” she said.

Bernier added that she was concerned that underminin­g elections could hurt Republican­s in the future.

“At some point we have to accept the election results and move on,” she said. “If the middle thinks the left is bonkers and the right is bonkers, they will stay home. I’m concerned about the middle.”

The details of the review in Pennsylvan­ia, where Biden defeated Trump by more than80,000 votes, are still murky. Last month, senate Republican­s voted to subpoena informatio­n on every registered voter in the state, including sensitive details such as the last four digits of their social security number.

Cris Dush, the Republican senator overseeing the effort, said last month the legislativ­e committee overseeing the investigat­ion said “there have been questions regarding the validity of people … who have voted, whether or not they exist,” according to the Philadelph­ia Inquirer. He added the committee was seeking to determine whether the allegation­s were factual.

Dush also traveled to Arizona to observe the Maricopa review. (A spokesman for senate Republican­s said Dush was unavailabl­e for an interview.)

Democrats in the Pennsylvan­ia state senate as well as the attorney general, Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, are suing to block the subpoenas. Senate Democrats argue the request amounts to an effort to contest the election and Shapiro has said it would violate voters’ rights.

Perhaps the most perplexing postelecti­on review is happening in Texas. Hours after Trump requested an audit of the 2020 election results, state officials announced they had already begun one in Dallas, Harris, Tarrant and Collin counties, respective­ly the two largest Democratic-leaning and Republican-leaning counties.

When the secretary of state’s office released details of the review days after the announceme­nt, its first phase included several measures counties were already required to perform after the election, the Texas Tribune reported. The second phase of the review, set for spring 2022, includes an examinatio­n of several election records, including voter registrati­on lists, chain of custody logs and rejected provisiona­l ballots.

Texas Republican­s are also advancing a separate piece of legislatio­n that would allow partisan county officials to request an audit of the 2020 election in their county as well as of future election results.

Becker, the elections administra­tion expert, said those who backed the audit were making an “outrageous insinuatio­n” that elections don’t matter.

“It is delegitimi­zing democracy as a form of government,” he said. “The election was not close by any historical measure. And these grifters are continuing to sell the story to Trump supporters that you cannot trust elections, that you cannot trust democracy.”

 ?? Photograph: Nam Y Huh/AP ?? Observers look at a screen during a Milwaukee hand recount of presidenti­al votes on 20 November 2020. A further three efforts are being made to review Wisconsin’s 2020 election results.
Photograph: Nam Y Huh/AP Observers look at a screen during a Milwaukee hand recount of presidenti­al votes on 20 November 2020. A further three efforts are being made to review Wisconsin’s 2020 election results.
 ?? Photograph: Nathan Layne/Reuters ?? Cris Dush, a Republican state senator in Pennsylvan­ia, is overseeing the partisan investigat­ion into the 2020 election results in the state.
Photograph: Nathan Layne/Reuters Cris Dush, a Republican state senator in Pennsylvan­ia, is overseeing the partisan investigat­ion into the 2020 election results in the state.

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