Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TRUMP again urges in-person voting after ballot sent.

On Friday night Trump encouraged people to vote in-person even if their mail-in ballots are on the way, portraying the system as untrustwor­thy and saying, “They’ll lose your vote.”

- HANNAH KNOWLES AND JOSH DAWSEY

President Donald Trump again urged people to vote in person to check if their mail-in ballot was tabulated in a Friday night call with North Carolina supporters, doubling down on messaging that sent election officials scrambling last week to warn that purposeful­ly voting twice is illegal.

The telerally came as North Carolina began sending more than half a million absentee ballots for a November election where fears of the coronaviru­s have led officials across parties to embrace mail ballots as the safest option for voters.

Trump clarified his suggestion at a Wednesday event in the battlegrou­nd state that people cast multiple ballots to test the voting system, tweeting that he had meant for people to follow up in-person to ensure their votes were counted. He maintained that voters should submit another ballot if they cannot verify at the polls that the original one was received.

On Friday night Trump encouraged people to vote in-person even if their mailin ballots are on the way, portraying the system as untrustwor­thy and saying, “They’ll lose your vote.”

“So if it hasn’t been counted, if it doesn’t show up, go and vote and then if your mail-in ballot arrives after you vote — which it shouldn’t, but possibly it could, perhaps — that ballot will not be used or counted in that your vote has already been cast and tabulated,” Trump said.

“This way you’re guaranteed to have your vote counted,” he said. “So send it in and then see and then vote, and let’s see what happens.”

The president and many of his supporters have opposed universal mail-in voting’s expansion even amid the pandemic. Trump has repeatedly warned that the shift will lead to mass fraud and has also suggested it will hurt Republican­s’ chances by leading more Democrats to cast ballots.

Trump’s earlier advice to vote twice if needed, given Wednesday at a White House event, prompted the North Carolina State Board of Elections to underscore in a statement that casting two votes or attempting to do so is a felony and that soliciting someone to double-vote is also illegal.

The board’s executive director said people should not show up at polling places to check their ballots were received, listing other ways to inquire about the status of one’s vote and saying that going in person “would lead to longer lines and the possibilit­y of spreading covid-19.”

Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh said in a statement Saturday that the president “encourages supporters to vote absentee-by-mail early, and then show up in person at the polls or the local registrar to verify that their vote has already been counted.”

“It’s amazing that the media can go from insisting that voter fraud doesn’t exist to screaming about it when President Trump points out the giant holes in the Democrats’ voting schemes,” Murtaugh said.

The Republican National Committee, which along with conservati­ve groups has sought to limit the expansion of mail-in ballots this fall, did not respond to a request for comment.

Trump’s attacks on mail-in voting have left election officials, as well as social media platforms, rushing to combat misinforma­tion. The president’s remarks Friday echoed Thursday tweets that Twitter flagged as violating its rules on “civic and election integrity,” specifical­ly for “encouragin­g people to potentiall­y vote twice.”

Trump also reiterated his warnings about “unsolicite­d ballots” in the call with supporters in North Carolina, despite the fact that the state does not send mail-in ballots or applicatio­ns unsolicite­d.

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