The Sentinel-Record

Lawsuit is latest evidence of bogus ‘stolen election’ claims

- NICHOLAS RICCARDI

Two years after former President Donald Trump’s false claims about widespread election fraud sparked an attack on the U.S. Capitol, more evidence is piling up that those who spread the misinforma­tion knew it was false.

On Thursday, the voting machine company Dominion filed court papers documentin­g that numerous Fox News personalit­ies knew there was no evidence to support the claims peddled by Trump’s allies, but aired them anyway on the nation’s mostwatche­d cable network. The same day, a special grand jury in Atlanta concluded there was no evidence of the fraud that Trump alleged cost him Georgia during the 2020 election.

In December, the congressio­nal Jan. 6 committee disclosed that Trump’s top advisers and even family members repeatedly warned him that the allegation­s he was making about fraud costing him reelection were false — only to have the president continue making those claims, anyway.

The latest revelation­s are not just historical curiositie­s. They add to the wealth of evidence that there was no widespread fraud during the 2020 presidenti­al election and that even some of Trump’s most prominent supporters were aware of that fact at the time.

Trump has announced he’s running for president again in 2024 and continues to repeat the lie that he lost in 2020 only because of fraud and irregulari­ties.

“It demonstrat­es a profound cynicism about the political process and the gullibilit­y of Trump’s supporters,” said Rick Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, who has followed the election falsehoods closely since 2020.

“It’s really playing with fire,” Hasen said. “It’s one thing to make extravagan­t and unsupporte­d statements about someone’s position on taxes or immigratio­n.” But doing the same about the actual process of voting and counting ballots is different, he said: “Lies about elections are much more dangerous than lies about actual policy.”

From the beginning, it was clear that Trump’s assertions of widespread fraud were false.

Trump’s own attorney general told him there was no evidence of significan­t wrongdoing related to the election. He and his supporters filed dozens of lawsuits and lost all but one of them — a bid to reduce the time voters had to correct errors on Pennsylvan­ia mail ballots.

Trump claimed that fraud cost him wins in key swing states that determined the White House — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin. But, repeatedly, reviews of the vote tallies or Republican-controlled investigat­ions in those states turned up no evidence that had happened.

In Michigan, an investigat­ion by the GOP-controlled state Senate found no widespread fraud and debunked several false claims of irregulari­ties from Trump allies. In Nevada, the Republican secretary of state said there was no evidence of significan­t errors in the election. In Wisconsin, an audit from the nonpartisa­n Legislativ­e Audit Bureau — which reports to the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e — found the election there was “safe and secure.”

In Georgia, where Trump’s efforts to overturn the results is being investigat­ed, the 2020 ballots were counted three times — each tally confirming Biden’s win. That included a hand recount of the 5 million ballots cast in the presidenti­al race.

In Arizona, a months-long, error-riddled review of ballots in the state’s largest county, Maricopa, that was run by election conspiracy theorists ended by finding that Biden had won by a slightly larger margin than official results showed. The review was not more reliable than the official tally by Republican-run Maricopa County, which has repeatedly said there were no irregulari­ties in the 2020 election there.

The latest revelation that people spreading Trump’s false claims knew there was no evidence to support them comes from a court filing in a defamation suit filed by Dominion Voting Systems against Fox News. Dominion’s machines were the targets of Trump and other conspiracy theorists’ allegation­s in late 2020 and last year, including the contention that they had been rigged by an internatio­nal cabal seeking to defeat Trump.

In its latest filing, Dominion cites texts and emails between prominent Fox personalit­ies who did not believe the allegation­s or the people closest to Trump who spread them most aggressive­ly, former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and attorney Sidney Powell.

The Dominion filing alleges that the network was initially cautious about fraud claims, with its top anchor, Bret Baier, privately stating two days after the 2020 election “there is NO evidence of election fraud.”

But after Powell and Giuliani began making allegation­s about fraud that were picked up by conservati­ve competitor­s, executives and top hosts started worrying about losing viewers to the conservati­ve network Newsmax, which repeatedly aired unrebutted allegation­s from Trump’s side. Fox started inviting the two Trump allies on their shows and top executives pushed back on news reporters who tried to factcheck the allegation­s.

“Sidney Powell is lying” about having evidence of election fraud, Tucker Carlson told a producer about the attorney on Nov. 16, 2020, according to an excerpt from an exhibit that remains under seal. Two days later, according to the filing, Carlson told fellow Fox News host Laura Ingraham, “Our viewers are good people and they believe it.”

The next day, the lawsuit notes, Carlson addressed the issue on his show less bluntly: “Maybe Sidney Powell will come forward soon with details on exactly how this happened, and precisely who did it. … We are certainly hopeful that she will.”

Fox, in response, filed a countercla­im against Dominion alleging it was trying to chill coverage of a political controvers­y and that it aired denials of the allegation­s from Dominion and its representa­tives.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ Election officials read documents before a hand recount of ballots on Nov. 20, 2020, at the Wisconsin Center in Milwaukee, Wis. Former President Donald Trump claimed that fraud cost him wins in key swing states that determined the White House — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin. But, repeatedly, reviews of the vote tallies or Republican-controlled investigat­ions in those states turned up no evidence that had happened.
The Associated Press ■ Election officials read documents before a hand recount of ballots on Nov. 20, 2020, at the Wisconsin Center in Milwaukee, Wis. Former President Donald Trump claimed that fraud cost him wins in key swing states that determined the White House — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin. But, repeatedly, reviews of the vote tallies or Republican-controlled investigat­ions in those states turned up no evidence that had happened.

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