Trump's Voter Fraud Tour
Former President Donald Trump has been ostensibly campaigning for candidates across the country this election year, but his focus at these events is always on himself.
And, inevitably, he uses these events to make bogus allegations of voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election.
That's what happened on July 22 in Arizona.
In his appearance, which lasted more than an hour and a half, Trump made yet another unsubstantiated claim of voter fraud, this time relying on a disputed, partisan report to assert that “thousands and thousands and thousands of crooked votes” came out of nursing homes in Wisconsin.
At the heart of the controversy was a decision by the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission to change the rules for collecting ballots at nursing homes because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Trump suggested something suspicious was afoot because “almost everybody” in Wisconsin’s nursing homes voted, when “historically only a very small portion” vote.
But Trump is wrong on both counts. As Deputy Managing Editor Robert Farley wrote, there is no evidence of fraud, and voting rates in the state’s nursing homes were not out of the ordinary.
For the details, read Rob's report "Unraveling Trump’s Unsubstantiated Claim of ‘Crooked’ Nursing Home Votes."
|