The Morning Call

As Trump repeats ‘the Big Lie,’ this group is working to boost faith in Pa.’s elections ahead of November

- By Julia Terruso

Mark Lefelhoc believes in voting, especially when former President Donald Trump is on the ballot. But since 2020, the retired truck driver hasn’t put much faith in the U.S. election system.

“How do I feel about the next one? Well, that depends,” Lefelhoc, 67, told The Inquirer this month at the National Rifle Associatio­n’s outdoor show in Harrisburg. “Are they going to steal it again?”

Lefelhoc is one of thousands of Americans who still believe the “Big Lie,” that Trump won the 2020 election. As the 2024 election approaches, county election boards, officials and some nonprofit groups are trying to improve trust in U.S. elections.

Trump’s most faithful believers may never come around, especially as Trump has continued to push a false narrative of election denialism — as he did Feb. 9 in Harrisburg when he wrongly claimed he won Pennsylvan­ia twice. But others hope voters who have some skepticism about elections or susceptibi­lity to misinforma­tion can be reached simply by demystifyi­ng the process of how elections work.

“I think what we saw in ‘20 was a lot of people not understand­ing the system,” former Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Corbett said. “And I think they still don’t.”

Corbett, a Republican who left office before Trump’s rise, is on the board of a nonprofit group, Keep Our Republic, which is trying to rebuild trust in elections ahead of November. The group is running programmin­g in Pennsylvan­ia, Wisconsin and Michigan. Most recently, it convened a panel in Lancaster.

“Pennsylvan­ians are going to have a lot of questions about why on Tuesday night we’re probably not going to know who won Pennsylvan­ia’s electoral votes,” said Ari Mittleman, the executive director of Keep Our Republic. “We’re not going to get to 13 million Pennsylvan­ians but we’re trying to get to the key constituen­cies and key counties to get into the weeds of how those counties are administer­ing their elections.”

In 2020, processing mail ballots in Pennsylvan­ia took days, delaying a call on who won the state — and the presidency — until the Saturday after Election Day.

Corbett would love to see county officials doing more educationa­l outreach — at county fairs and other community events. Many county election boards are already stretched thin in staffing and resources, though, so the group is trying to facilitate conversati­ons and programmin­g.

What the heck is a certificat­e of ascertainm­ent?

In Lancaster this month, the group presented informatio­n on how elections are run. At other events, Keep Our Republic has presented a PowerPoint that starts with the messy election of 1876 and tracks changes to election law through history to better safeguard voting. The group also covers how elections are certified, from counties

uploading results to absentee votes to post-election audits.

It’s dry stuff but it’s important and not very well known, Mittleman said.

Mittleman was meeting with legislator­s in Wisconsin last year when a senior-level elected official confessed he had no idea about the post-Election Day process.

“He said, ‘I was on the ballot 16 times. I knew how to get my people to the polls. I knew which supporters I’d bus down for inaugurati­on. … I never stopped and thought about November and December,’” Mittleman said, recalling the conversati­on.

“If someone at that level of state politics doesn’t really think about … a governor’s certificat­e of ascertainm­ent, than Joe Q public certainly doesn’t,” Mittleman said, referring to the document governors sign to appoint electors to the Electoral College.

There’s also the tedious but important work of combating misinforma­tion. Corbett, in a recent radio interview in Harrisburg, was

asked about “ballot harvesting in nursing homes.”

“Well, again, ‘What do you mean by harvesting?’ ” Corbett said he asked the caller. Pressuring someone on how to vote is illegal but helping an elderly family member vote is allowed.

“But that needs to be explained,” Corbett said. “And then maybe asking the questions, ‘Well, where have you seen that?’ I’m a prosecutor. I believe in evidence. I believe in facts.”

‘We’ve got to stop the cheating.’

Corbett would have to do a lot of radio interviews to combat all the misinforma­tion about 2020.

According to The Washington Post, about two-thirds of Republican Iowa caucusgoer­s said they did not believe President Joe Biden legitimate­ly won the 2020 election.

More broadly, the percentage of Republican­s nationally who think Biden’s win was illegitima­te hit nearly 70% in an August CNN poll.

And at Trump’s NRA-hosted rally in Harrisburg, supporters consistent­ly brought up their belief that Trump won in 2020, unprompted.

“I still don’t believe it was a legitimate win,” said Barbara Holstein, an educator and school bus driver from Sussex County who was attending her sixth Trump rally. She cited the widely debunked election denial book “2,000 Mules” as proof.

“Were those votes real? Sure,” Holstein said. “They were real ballots, but they weren’t real votes.”

Richard Dugan, 70, a retired carbon factory worker from Potter County, said election integrity was his No. 2 issue after securing the border.

“We’ve got to stop the cheating,” Dugan said. “If you got to cheat to win, you don’t deserve to be in there and as far as I’m concerned Trump won that election.”

Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., who worked in county government before becoming a senator, said misinforma­tion headed into the 2024 election is extremely worrisome. He’s co-sponsored a bill that would require a warning label of sorts on any campaign ads or material meant to influence an election that uses artificial intelligen­ce.

He doesn’t think the Big Lie is as widespread outside of Trump’s most faithful, though, as evidenced in GOP losses in races where they ran election deniers in the 2022 midterms.

“I think it is corrosive to have a former president who has been dedicated full time for years to saying the election system is horribly broken,” Coons said. “But the American people get it. They’re in on the joke. In the states where Republican­s won, they … didn’t raise any questions about the legitimacy of the elections.”

And Corbett said his group isn’t aiming at the extremes.

“There are a huge amount of people in the middle that can be influenced by the actions of people on the extremes. And what we’re trying to do is educate and say, ‘You need to trust the system,’ ” Corbett said. “You can question the system, but you should be questionin­g the system now to see how it’s done.’ ”

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/GETTY ?? Dozens of people calling for stopping the vote count in Pennsylvan­ia due to false claims of fraud against President Donald Trump gathered on the steps of the state Capitol on Nov. 5, 2020, in Harrisburg.
SPENCER PLATT/GETTY Dozens of people calling for stopping the vote count in Pennsylvan­ia due to false claims of fraud against President Donald Trump gathered on the steps of the state Capitol on Nov. 5, 2020, in Harrisburg.

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