Yesterday afternoon, President Obama delivered an unsparing speech in Washington, rejecting Republicans’ budget, their shift to the very far right, and their entire approach to governing. Fox News viewers got to some of the early portions of the remarks, but the network soon broke away to cover a breaking story … which happened to be a four-year-old incident.
What had Fox so excited? Ed Kilgore explained that the right has taken a keen interest in an obscure Indiana indictment.
The Fox lede makes it sound pretty lurid: “Felony charges related to election fraud have touched the 2008 race for the highest office in the land.” And the headline, below which are arranged mugshot-style photos of the malefactors, reads: “4 Indiana Dems charged with election fraud in 2008 presidential race.”
Elsewhere are bloggy headlines and shouts about “voter fraud” and, inevitably, “voter ID” …. Republicans promoting franchise-shrinking Voter ID laws, you see, are hard-pressed to supply evidence of any actual voter fraud, so anything that sounds remotely like it will get a lot of attention.
That’s true, though the details in this case help make a very different kind of point.
In Indiana, four county-level Democratic Party officials in South Bend are accused of falsifying some petition signatures to get all of the party’s major presidential candidates on the primary ballot in 2008. It’s unclear why they bothered — Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton enjoyed ample support in the area at the time — but whatever the reason, some local officials cut corners and got caught. Now they’re facing charges as a result.
Who cares? Well, those orchestrating a “war on voting” care a great deal — they’re desperate to find real-world examples of actual fraud in order to justify sweeping new restrictions on Americans’ ability to participate in elections. Fox has no qualms about breaking away from a major presidential speech to cover this Indiana story, because if the public can be convinced that election fraud is real, then voter-ID laws will appear more legitimate and less like efforts to rig elections.
But Fox may not have thought this one through enough.









