The Republican National Committee’s launch of an election integrity campaign follows a pattern. Donald Trump will lie about past elections while warning of looming fraud.
GOP convention in Milwaukee closes in on preparations
Anne Hathaway, the GOP convention organizing committee chairwoman, talks about the status of preparations on Monday, April 8, 2024, at Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee.
Donald Trump and the Republican National Committee called Friday for more than “100,000 dedicated volunteers and attorneys” to help run an “election integrity program” this year.
That’s the next step in the election disinformation campaign that Trump will wage until Nov. 5, enabled by the RNC.
How do I know? Because that’s exactly what Trump and the RNC did in the months before he won the presidency in 2016 and in the months before he lost his bid for a second term in 2020.
So many things about this election are difficult to predict. This is an easy call.
It follows a pattern. Trump will lie about past elections while warning of looming fraud. He and the RNC will file a flurry of legal challenges that read more like efforts to circulate duplicity and less like cogent arguments about law.
Trump still claims 2020 election was stolen
Consider what Trump had to say during his last campaign rally, on April 13 in Schnecksville, Pennsylvania, before starting his first criminal trial in New York: “The election was rigged. Pure and simple, 2020 was rigged. It was a disgrace. We could never let it happen again.”
Will Trump trial impact voters? I asked Trump supporters if they’re worried about his Stormy Daniels trial.
And let’s go back to the months before the 2016 election and focus on Pennsylvania, because that’s where I was, writing about Trump’s campaign.
Trump, in the last three months before the 2016 election, claimed at rallies in suburban and exurban Pennsylvania that voter fraud in Philadelphia could kill his chance to win the state.
As an example, he said that U.S. Sen. Mitt Romney didn’t win a single vote in 50 of the 1,687 voting divisions in Philadelphia as the Republican nominee for president in 2012.
That claim fell apart with just a little scrutiny.
The chair of Philadelphia’s Republican Party in 2016 told me then it was unsurprising that Romney in 2012 received no votes in the divisions, which were and are overwhelmingly Democratic neighborhoods home to mostly Black voters who backed then-President Barack Obama.
Trump and the RNC ignored that obvious context and kept pressing the baseless claim of voter fraud, rushing to ask a federal judge in a failed effort to upend Pennsylvania’s election code’s qualifications for who can be a poll watcher. The judge in that case, a former Republican state attorney general, noted that the Republican-controlled state legislature had opted against making that change.
The Republican Party in 2016 called that “a blow to openness and transparency” in elections. Because context wasn’t the point. Pushing the message of alleged voter fraud was all that mattered.
Trump made false fraud claims before Election Day
Trump used the same bag of tricks in 2020, as Pennsylvania expanded its use of mail ballots just before the COVID-19 pandemic hit.
That put Pennsylvania’s Republican Party in a difficult position − urging voters to use mail ballots while supporting Trump’s lies about them being overly susceptible to fraud.
Trump bashes mail-in voting: Trump keeps lying about 2020 mail ballots. It could hurt Republicans in November.
Trump took his attacks on Philadelphia and Pennsylvania national that year, declaring in a debate with Democratic rival Joe Biden that “bad things happen in Philadelphia” when it comes to voting.
Trump made that claim because his campaign sent supporters to watch as people dropped off early ballots at satellite elections offices in the city. Pennsylvania poll watchers are not allowed in those locations. And Trump’s campaign had no certified poll watchers at the time.
For him, enforcing the law is…
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