USA TODAY International Edition

Vote suits targeted minority counties

Risk of lasting damage from false fraud claims

- Kristine Phillips

WASHINGTON – In courtrooms across the country, judges have issued one withering rebuke after another, rejecting President Donald Trump’s campaign’s efforts to invalidate millions of votes and cast doubt on the election he lost.

By Monday, all swing states had certified Democrat Joe Biden’s victory.

Trump and his allies have spent weeks telling the public that massive voter fraud and irregulari­ties occurred in big cities and counties with large population­s of Black and Latino voters. These sweeping allegation­s raised concerns among voting rights experts that the president is perpetuati­ng a harmful perception: that voters of color are the culprit in an unfounded – but widely believed – conspiracy to rig the election, and their votes should be invalidate­d.

Trump’s effort to blame cities, such as Detroit and Philadelph­ia, ignores a

critical point: Suburbs and exurbs in swing states propelled Biden to victory – not urban centers, where Trump won more votes than he did four years ago.

“I see loud and clear that the lawsuits are based primarily in communitie­s of color, particular­ly African American communitie­s,” said Justin Levitt, a former Justice Department official whose work focused on voting rights. “It sure seems like an attempt to teach millions of Americans that there’s a particular group to blame for what people feel – wrongly, incorrectl­y, without any factual support whatsoever.”

In Michigan, the Trump campaign’s legal challenges focused on Wayne County, specifically on alleged anomalies at an election center in Detroit, where nearly 80% of the population is Black. No such anomalies were alleged in predominan­tly white suburban counties where Biden won by large margins.

In Wisconsin, the Trump campaign sought a recount in Milwaukee County, home to the state’s largest percentage of voters of color. About 27% of the county’s population is Black, and 15% is Hispanic or Latino. In Pennsylvan­ia, the Trump campaign targeted Philadelph­ia County, where 43% of the population is Black and 15% is Hispanic or Latino.

Other legal challenges were mounted in Georgia’s Chatham County, where 41% of the population is Black, and Arizona’s Maricopa County, where 31% of the population is Hispanic or Latino. In Nevada, Trump’s allies sought to have him named the winner, focusing attacks on Clark County, where nearly 32% of the population is Hispanic or Latino.

The campaign also sued and sought recounts in a handful of predominan­tly white suburban counties in Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin.

Jenna Ellis, Trump’s legal adviser, said the campaign’s “only goal” is to “ensure safe, secure and fair elections.”

“Every American deserves to know that our elections are conducted in a legal manner, no matter who they are or where they live. … That’s what our Constituti­on requires,” Ellis said in a statement.

The Trump campaign did not address why its legal challenges in Michigan focused only on Wayne County and Detroit and ignored predominan­tly white suburban counties such as Washtenaw and Ingham, where Biden won by significant margins.

Lawsuits fell flat but could do lasting damage

In Wayne County, the Trump campaign alleged in a federal lawsuit that Republican poll watchers were not allowed to observe the vote- counting process, which deprived the campaign of examining ballots it suspected to be ineligible or fraudulent.

Another lawsuit filed by an attorney seeking to stop election certification in Wayne County relied on affidavits alleging incidents of fraud inside a Detroit election center.

Both cases fizzled. The Trump campaign withdrew the federal case, and a judge denied the request to stop certification, ruling the lawsuit’s interpreta­tion of events at the election center were “incorrect and not credible.”

Still, attacks on the legitimacy of election results could have lasting damage, experts said.

“They really revive kind of the old- style voter suppressio­n tactics against Black voters and targeting voters in majority Black cities,” said Vanita Gupta, who was head of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion. “These kinds of things are damaging to our de

mocracy, even when courts declare them frivolous.”

The Trump campaign made similar allegation­s in Philadelph­ia County in a lawsuit that broadly attacked the mail- in ballot system. In a ruling last month, a federal judge said the campaign sought to disenfranc­hise millions of voters by relying on “strained legal arguments” and “speculativ­e accusation­s” that were “unsupporte­d by evidence.”

In Chatham County, a judge dismissed a lawsuit claiming that 53 late ballots were mixed with eligible ones. In Maricopa County, the Trump campaign filed multiple lawsuits, including one alleging voters were improperly given Sharpies to mark their ballots, which rendered their votes invalid. Election officials disputed this claim, and the Trump campaign dropped the lawsuit.

“It’s obvious that the campaign and that the other people that are bringing these cases, they are going after the minority vote,” said Jon Greenbaum, chief counsel and senior deputy director for the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. “This belief that somehow the votes cast by Black voters and other voters of color aren’t entitled the same weight as other votes and are vulnerable to challenge – frankly, that’s offensive.”

Gerry Hebert, who spent 21 years at the Justice Department enforcing voting rights laws, said the lawsuits underscore democracy’s fragility.

“I think people in the African American and Latino communitie­s, for many years, have felt they are targeted for voter suppressio­n. I think all of these lawsuits have confirmed what they have known for a long time, which is that Jim Crow seems to be alive and well,” Hebert said, referring to laws passed in Southern states around the beginning of the 20th century to segregate and discrimina­te against Black people.

Hebert, a senior director of voting rights and redistrict­ing at the Campaign Legal Center, said the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division would be justified to investigat­e allegation­s that the Trump campaign targeted counties based on race.

“Whenever you have a situation where a campaign is trying to prevent the votes of minority voters from being counted, you want to look into it and see what’s going on there,” said Paul Smith, the Campaign Legal Center’s litigation director.

Other experts said that absent any action by the courts or state and local officials to invalidate election results in predominan­tly Black or Latino communitie­s, the Justice Department may not have grounds to investigat­e.

“The lawsuits have no action until the courts act on it. … Thus far, no votes have been put in jeopardy by the lawsuits,” said Levitt, a Loyola Law School professor.

The Justice Department did not respond to a request for comment.

This month, Attorney General William Barr authorized federal prosecutor­s to pursue any “substantia­l allegation­s” of voting irregulari­ties during the elections despite lack of evidence of massive fraud. The move contradict­ed long- standing Justice Department practice of not taking steps that could affect the results of an election.

Community leaders express anger

The Rev. Wendell Anthony, a pastor who heads the NAACP’s chapter in Detroit, accused Republican members of the Wayne County board of canvassers of trying to invalidate the votes of thousands of Black people.

“You have extracted a Black city out of a county and said that the only ones that are at fault, at issue, are in the city of Detroit,” Anthony said. “Shame on you.”

The angry response came after the four- member board of canvassers deadlocked on a vote to certify Wayne County’s election results. Members voted 2- 2 along party and racial lines. The two Republican members voted against certification before reversing their decision.

“Y’all Confederat­es, you’re not Republican­s. … Both of you should be aware of the fact that we’re no longer going to sit around and let white people take advantage of Black people,” William Davis, president of the Detroit Active and Retired Employee Associatio­n, told the Republican board members during a meeting after the deadlocked vote.

Trump inserted himself into the situation by calling one of the Republican board members. Both members later said they wanted to rescind their votes to certify. Controvers­y escalated after Trump invited Republican state lawmakers to the White House as he continued his long- shot bid to overturn election results in Michigan.

The calls and meetings did not stop election results from being certified, but Trump’s actions drew condemnati­on from advocates.

Sam Spital, director of litigation at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund, said these “highly irregular” contacts were designed to pressure officials to go against the popular vote – an action that he said could have disenfranc­hised thousands of Black voters in Detroit. The organizati­on filed a lawsuit accusing Trump and his campaign of targeting voters based on their race.

“I think it’s very important to be clear that any kind of efforts to target any state or local official that’s designed to overthrow the popular vote in a way that does so by disenfranc­hising Black people is inconsiste­nt with the Voting Rights Act,” Spital said.

Sophia Lin Lakin, deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Voting Rights Project, said the legal challenges, although unsuccessf­ul, could embolden state and local officials to enact measures that would make it harder for marginaliz­ed communitie­s to vote.

The rhetoric attacking the legitimacy of votes in predominan­tly Black or Latino communitie­s is “a slippery slope to even more voter suppressio­n,” she said. “The fact that you have a sitting president who’s trying to overturn the results of an election that he lost to disenfranc­hise Black voters in particular, even though it won’t work, doesn’t make it any less of an affront to democracy.” Contributi­ng: Joey Garrison, USA TODAY; Niraj Warikoo, Detroit Free Press; Mary Spicuzza and Alison Dirr, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; Jen Fifield, Andrew Oxford and Bree Burkitt, Arizona Republic; Will Peebles, Savannah Morning News; and The Associated Press

 ?? JOHN MOORE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ors celebrate the election of Joe Biden, denounce police violence and call for President Donald Trump to concede Nov. 7 in Detroit. Trump’s legal efforts to contest the results have failed.
JOHN MOORE/ GETTY IMAGES Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ors celebrate the election of Joe Biden, denounce police violence and call for President Donald Trump to concede Nov. 7 in Detroit. Trump’s legal efforts to contest the results have failed.

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