Trump campaign launches effort to fight voter fraud
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[April 20, 2024]
By Gram Slattery
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Donald Trump's campaign and the Republican
National Committee launched a program on Friday to combat voter fraud in
the lead-up to the November election, even as voting irregularities have
proven extremely rare in the United States.
The RNC and the Trump campaign said they were preparing to deploy more
than 100,000 attorneys and volunteers across the states that are
expected to be competitive in the presidential race.
The Republican Party and the Trump campaign said in a statement that
they plan to recruit an army of poll watchers, who will monitor
individual polling sites for irregularities.
Attorneys, meanwhile, will be stationed at "Republican Party War Rooms"
in competitive states, where they will staff an "Election Integrity
Hotline" to answer calls from poll watchers and voters who have observed
possible irregularities.
"Having the right people to count the ballots is just as important as
turning out voters on Election Day," Trump said in a statement.
"Republicans are now working together to protect the vote and ensure a
big win on November 5th!"
The RNC ran a voter integrity program during the 2022 congressional
elections, though the 2024 effort appears to represent a significant
step up in terms of its scope and ambition.
During this election cycle, the RNC has already engaged in 82 lawsuits
in 25 states related to election integrity, the committee said in the
Friday statement.
Since launching his reelection campaign in late 2022, Trump has
continued to falsely claim he lost the 2020 election due to widespread
voter fraud, despite a lack of supporting evidence and dozens of failed
lawsuits seeking to establish foul play.
Echoed by many of his allies in Congress, Trump's false claims about
voter fraud have been absorbed broadly by the Republican electorate, a
majority of which does not believe Biden was legitimately elected,
according to opinion polls.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to the media as he enters
Manhattan Criminal Court for his trial for allegedly covering up
hush money payments in New York, U.S., April 19, 2024. Spencer
Platt/Pool via REUTERS
On the campaign trail, Trump has sought to portray Democratic voters
as chronic cheaters who cannot be trusted.
During a speech in Iowa in December he told supporters to be ready
to "guard the vote" in Democratic-run cities, and more recently he
has demanded his backers vote in such large numbers as to render the
election "too big to rig" by the Democrats.
Asked about the latest Republican initiative, the Biden campaign
referred questions to the Democratic National Committee. The DNC
accused Trump and the RNC of trying to undermine the vote in
November.
"Donald Trump knows he's running a losing campaign, so he's working
with his handpicked team of election deniers at the RNC to once
again lay the groundwork to undermine our democracy and spread
baseless lies about a rigged election," said DNC spokesperson Alex
Floyd.
While most Republican poll watchers have conducted themselves
peacefully, there have been many reports of alleged intimidation by
poll watchers in recent elections that have drawn the attention of
election officials in competitive states, including North Carolina,
Arizona and Nevada.
(Reporting by Gram Slattery in Washington; Additional reporting by
Nathan Layne; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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