The California recall election met a quick and decisive demise when California voters resoundingly rejected efforts to recall Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom. But the baseless accusations of voter fraud that poisoned the end of the recall campaign show that unfounded attacks on our elections are here to stay.
Apparently now you don’t even have to wait for people to vote to claim a vote was tainted.
Claims that elections cannot be trusted did not begin with former President Donald Trump’s baseless attacks on our electoral processes in 2020, and they certainly will not end with that election.
Before the recall voting was finished and before votes were tabulated, a website for the leading Republican candidate in the recall election, conservative talk radio host Larry Elder, claimed “statistical analyses used to detect fraud in elections held in 3rd-world nations (such as Russia, Venezuela, and Iran) have detected fraud in California resulting in Governor Gavin Newsom being reinstated as governor.”
In some great news for those wishing to make unfounded attacks on our elections, apparently now you don’t even have to wait for people to vote to claim a vote was tainted.
Elder’s campaign urged people to sign a petition reporting voter fraud that appears to be lifted from materials filed by one of Trump’s biggest boosters in his failed attempt to overturn the 2020 election, attorney Lin Wood. (Yes, the same Lin Wood who has faced sanctions for his post-election litigation filings.)
The allegations of fraud in Elder’s website linked to another site, which asked voters to report fraud. Elder stated, again without any basis, that “there might very well be shenanigans, as there were in the 2020 election.” Not one to be left out of the fake fraud allegation party, Trump in a statement chimed in, “Does anybody really believe the California Recall Election isn’t rigged?”
While Elder’s campaign committed a bit of a snafu by posting allegations for voter fraud before voters were counted, his cynical strategy demonstrates a steady poisoning of a democratic processes. Elder, and all of the Republicans who stood behind Trump while he trumpeted false claims of election fraud, know you don’t have to be right to be believed. If a person in a position of power says something often enough, loudly enough and for long enough, people will believe them. It’s a dangerous lesson of politics 101: If you keep repeating the message, the message will take hold.
It’s a dangerous lesson of politics 101: If you keep repeating the message, the message will take hold.
The unfounded narrative that voter fraud pervades our elections has in fact taken hold of the Republican Party. Two-thirds of Republican voters believe the 2020 presidential election was stolen. This is despite no evidence to indicate voter fraud or election rigging and despite the fact that every state and federal judge to seriously look at suits alleging voter fraud tossed out those suits.








