The Morning Call

Fox, Newsmax knock down own aired claims on election

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK — Two election technology companies whose names have come up in President Donald Trump’s false charges of widespread voter fraud in the presidenti­al election are fighting back, prompting unusual public statements from Fox News and Newsmax.

Thestateme­nts, over the weekend and on Monday, came after the companies Smartmatic and Dominion raised the prospect of legal action for reporting what they said was false informatio­n about them.

Both companies were referenced in the campaign’s suggestion that vote counts in swing states were manipulate­d to the advantage of President-elect Joe Biden. The companies deny several statements made about them,andthereis­noevidence­any voting system switched or deleted votes in the 2020 election.

Anearly two-minutepre-taped segment wasaired over the weekend on a Fox Business Network programhos­tedbyLouDo­bbsand Fox News Channel shows with Maria Bartiromo and Jeanine Pirro.

That came days after Smartmatic sent a letter threatenin­g legal action to Fox and two other networks popular with Trump supporters, Newsmax and One America News Network.

The two-minute Fox segments aired in the form of a question-and-answersess­ion between an offscreen voice and Eddie Perez, a voting technology expert at the nonpartisa­n Open Source Election Technology Institute.

“I have not seen any evidence that Smartmatic software was used to delete, change or alter anything related to vote tabulation­s,” Perez said.

The company says its only work that involved the 2020 U.S. election came in Los Angeles. Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani has falsely claimed that Smartmatic was founded in Venezuela by former dictator Hugo Chavez for the goal of fixing elections. Smartmatic was started in Florida in 2000. Its founder is Venezuelan, but the company said Chavez was never involved, andits last workinVene­zuela came in 2017 when its software found the government had reported false turnout numbers.

After the segmentair­ed Sunday onBartirom­o’s show, she said, “So that is where we stand right now. We will keep investigat­ing.”

Perez also said there was no apparent business relationsh­ip between Smart ma tic and Dominion; Trump’ s lawyers have claimed with noevidence that Dominion’s vote counting system used at some locations in the U.S. elections had used Smartmatic’s software.

Asked Monday about the segments, Smartmatic’s lawyer, J. Erik Connolly, said the company “cannot comment on the recent broadcast by Fox News due to potential litigation.”

The network did not comment beyond the on-air segments aired over the weekend.

A statement aired by News max anchors on Monday, and also printed on the company website, was much broader and concerned both Smartmatic and Dominion.

In the statement, Newsmax said there were “several facts our viewers and readers should be aware,” among them the lack of a business relationsh­ip between the two companies or that Dominion had any ownership relationsh­ip with George Soros, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and others.

“No evidence has been offered that Dominion or Smartmatic used software or reprogramm­ed software that manipulate­d votes in the 2020 election,” Newsmax said.

Companyspo­kesman Anthony Rizzo said Newsmax itself had never made a claim of impropriet­y, but that others had appeared on the network to raise questions about Smartmatic.

“As any major media outlet, we provide a forum for public concerns anddiscuss­ion,” hesaid.

There was no immediate response to a request for comment from OANN.

 ?? EVANVUCCI/AP ?? Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., speaks as President Donald Trump watches this month in Georgia. Many GOPvoters in Georgia are certain widespread voter fraud cost the president the election.
EVANVUCCI/AP Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., speaks as President Donald Trump watches this month in Georgia. Many GOPvoters in Georgia are certain widespread voter fraud cost the president the election.

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