Dominion Voting Systems is a company that makes election software for local government officials. It’s generally not widely known to the public at large, though Donald Trump sought to change that yesterday with a hysterical, all-caps tweet.
Apparently responding to something he saw on a far-right television station, the outgoing president highlighted a “report” that Dominion Voting Systems “deleted” and “switched” millions of Republican votes. It was the sort of tweet one might expect from a fringe conspiracy theorist with a handful of Twitter followers, except in this case, the missive was published by the ostensible leader of the free world.
Naturally, Trump’s tweet was discredited — quickly and easily — and the claim was added to the pile of debunked nonsense the Republican incumbent has peddled in the wake of election defeat.
But the fact that such a pile exists is itself important.
Over the last several days, the president and his team have meandered from one strange claim to another. Watching the effort unfold has been like watching a severely intoxicated person try to walk a straight line. Trump has struggled to decide whether he wants vote counts to continue or stop. He’s celebrated parts of ballots, while rejecting other parts. He both believes and disbelieves news organizations that call elections.
The president and his political operation file laughable lawsuits. They toy with the idea of asking state officials to override voters’ will. They throw around affidavits that might as well have been written in crayon. They start with weird allegations, then scramble to find evidence to bolster them, then ask for patience when they discover no such evidence exists.









