Election deniers on ballot aim to run U.S. presidential vote in 2024
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[November 08, 2022]
By Michelle Nichols
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Americans in key
election battlegrounds on Tuesday will decide who will run the 2024
presidential vote in their states, choosing from a slate of candidates
that includes Republicans who back former President Donald Trump's false
claim that he won in 2020.
In 30 of the country's 50 states, so-called "election deniers" are
candidates for at least one of the state's positions overseeing
elections - governor, secretary of state or attorney general, according
to nonprofit advocacy group States United Action.
"The risk is that an election denier serving as a state official could
try to manipulate the results in 2024 so that their preferred candidate
wins — even if they don't receive the most votes," said States United
Action head Joanna Lydgate.
According to States United Action, election deniers are running for
secretary of state in 13 states, including in the key swing states of
Arizona, Michigan and Nevada. Democratic President Joe Biden narrowly
won all three states in 2020.
"Secretaries of state have a huge role to play in overseeing the
administration of the election and making sure that the results
accurately reflect the will of the voters," said Lydgate.
POPULAR VOTE WORRIES
Voting rights groups and constitutional scholars worry about the
potential for a secretary of state to dispute or ignore the popular vote
total, to refuse to certify a presidential election result, or even to
claim the losing candidate actually won their state.
In Arizona, Republican secretary of state candidate Mark Finchem said he
would not have certified Biden's 2020 victory in the state. He supported
an audit of Arizona's election results and backed a bill that would give
the state's Republican-controlled legislature the power to overturn
election results.
Republican secretary of state candidate in Michigan, Kristina Karamo,
was a little-known political figure but soared to prominence when she
claimed in 2020 that she had witnessed fraud at Detroit's absentee
counting board as a poll observer. No evidence has ever emerged
supporting those claims.
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U.S. Republican candidate for Arizona
secretary of state Mark Finchem, endorsed by former U.S. President
Donald Trump, speaks on stage before a rally ahead of the midterm
elections, in Mesa, Arizona, U.S., October 9, 2022. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder/File Photo
In Nevada the secretary of state does not have the power to certify
results but can set and enforce election rules. Republican candidate
and former state assemblyman Jim Marchant opposed certification of
Biden's win in the state in 2020.
Trump falsely claims that Biden won the presidential election
through massive fraud. The assertion has been rejected by several
court rulings, the former president's own Justice Department and
even Republican-led investigations at the state level.
DEMOCRACY
Trump is considering launching this month a bid to win the White
House again in 2024, according to several Trump advisers.
Ahead of Tuesday's elections, Biden accused Trump of inspiring
Republican election denier candidates and warned voters: "Democracy
is on the ballot for all of us."
Richard Gowan, U.N. director at the International Crisis Group think
tank, said that if election deniers score some big wins in Tuesday's
elections it would undercut Biden's key U.S. foreign policy theme of
promoting democracy.
"If U.S. democracy looks like it is back on life support, I think
you'll see even good friends of the U.S. start to edge away from
Washington on democracy issues."
(Reporting by Michelle Nichols, additional reporting by Tim Reid,
editing by Ross Colvin and Chizu Nomiyama)
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