The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Senate hearing elevates claims of fraud

- By Christina A. Cassidy and Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON » Republican senators on Wednesday further perpetuate­d President Donald Trump’s claims of widespread voter fraud, two days after Democrat Joe Biden’s victory was sealed by the Electoral College.

Lawmakers bickered heatedly at times during a committee hearing, as Democrats pushed back against the allegation­s, and a former federal cybersecur­ity official who oversaw election security said continued attempts to undermine confidence in the process were corrosive to democracy.

The session, held by the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee over Democratic protests, elevated the claims of fraud to the highest levels of government, and provided two of Trump’s lawyers with one more public opportunit­y to make the assertions after repeatedly losing in court.

The hearing mimicked those held in some battlegrou­nd states with local lawmakers, where Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani led some Republican­s in airing their election grievances without any proof. Those hearings were held after consistent legal defeats.

GOP Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, the committee chairman and one of Trump’s fiercest defenders, said his goal was to have a bipartisan hearing to examine the election. But he repeated Trump’s assertions without evidence and focused heavily on the claims being made by the president’s team.

There was no testimony from state or local election officials who conducted extensive checks to ensure the accuracy of the election before certifying the results. Those officials have said there was no indication of any widespread fraud.

Voter fraud does happen, but studies have shown it is rare. Election officials say that when fraud occurs, it is caught and those responsibl­e are prosecuted, and that there are numerous safeguards to ensure that only eligible voters cast a ballot.

Democrats did solicit the testimony of Christophe­r Krebs, who led the U.S. Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency until he was fired by Trump Nov. 17. Under Krebs, the agency operated a “rumor control” web page that debunked some of the conspiracy theories being perpetuate­d by Trump and his allies.

Under questionin­g, Krebs acknowledg­ed that some of his staff had been approached about making changes to the web page, but none was made, and he said voting systems were secure in the 2020 election.

“I’m seeing these reports, that are factually inaccurate, continue to be promoted,” Krebs said. “We have to stop this. It’s underminin­g confidence in democracy.”

Attorney General William Barr has similarly addressed the claims of criminal fraud, telling The Associated Press earlier this month that there had been no indication of fraud on the level that could change the outcome of the election. On Tuesday, Trump announced Barr would leave his post by the Christmas holiday, after the president publicly expressed his frustratio­n over the comments.

During the session, Trump tweeted that Krebs was “totally excoriated and proven wrong at the Senate Hearing on the Fraudulent 2020 Election” and the president insisted that “Massive FRAUD took place.”

Trump and his allies have pushed conspiraci­es involving voting machines manipulate­d by dead foreign leaders and argued that tens of thousands of fraudulent mail ballots escaped layers of security and scrutiny by election workers. The president and his supporters have filed the lawsuits without evidence, tried to pressure state lawmakers into seating their own presidenti­al electors, and sought to influence low-level party members who sit on the state and local boards that certify election results.

At one point during the hearing, Johnson and the committee’s top Democrat, Michigan Sen. Gary Peters, yelled at each other after Johnson brought up old, unrelated Democratic claims that he spread disinforma­tion earlier in the year about work done in Ukraine by Hunter Biden, the president-elect’s son.

Johnson said Peters had “lied” about the Republican’s role.

Peters shot back that Johnson was “airing old grievances.”

Peters said the hearing “gives a platform to conspiracy theories and lies” and is destructiv­e.

“These claims are false. And giving them more oxygen is a grave threat to the future of our democracy,” Peters said.

Johnson said Trump’s election claims, which many in the GOP believe, “raised legitimate concerns and they do need to be taken seriously.” Jesse Binnall, an attorney for the Trump campaign, testified that “our evidence has never been refuted, only ignored.”

The Trump campaign and allies have filed roughly 50 lawsuits alleging some type of voter fraud, and nearly all have been dropped or dismissed by conservati­ve and liberal judges who have said the legal claims lacked evidence. The Supreme Court, which includes three Trump-nominated justices, has also denied requests to hear a pair of cases aimed at invalidati­ng the outcome of the election in key states.

 ?? GREG NASH — POOL VIA AP ?? Christophe­r Krebs, former director of the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, testifies before a Senate Homeland Security & Government­al Affairs Committee hearing to discuss election security and the 2020 election process Dec. 16. He said Wednesday voting systems were secure in November.
GREG NASH — POOL VIA AP Christophe­r Krebs, former director of the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, testifies before a Senate Homeland Security & Government­al Affairs Committee hearing to discuss election security and the 2020 election process Dec. 16. He said Wednesday voting systems were secure in November.
 ?? JIM LO SCALZO — POOL VIA AP ?? GOP Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, the committee chairman and one of Trump’s fiercest defenders, said his goal was to have a bipartisan hearing to examine the election. But he repeated Trump’s assertions without evidence and focused heavily on the claims being made by the president’s team.
JIM LO SCALZO — POOL VIA AP GOP Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, the committee chairman and one of Trump’s fiercest defenders, said his goal was to have a bipartisan hearing to examine the election. But he repeated Trump’s assertions without evidence and focused heavily on the claims being made by the president’s team.

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