Trump sues Des Moines Register, pollster for 'election interference'
after pre-election poll
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[December 18, 2024]
By DAVID BAUDER
President-elect Donald Trump sued the Des Moines Register and its
pollster for “brazen election interference” in publishing a survey the
weekend before the election that showed Democrat Kamala Harris with a
surprising lead of three percentage points in the state.
The Register's parent Gannett Co. on Tuesday dismissed the lawsuit as
meritless and said it would vigorously defend its First Amendment
rights.
The lawsuit continues the president-elect's campaign against media
outlets he feels have wronged him. ABC this past weekend agreed to pay
$15 million toward a Trump presidential library in order to settle a
defamation lawsuit against George Stephanopoulos for inaccurately saying
Trump had been found civilly liable for rape.
The Des Moines survey, done by since-retired pollster J. Ann Selzer, was
considered shocking for indicating that an earlier Trump lead in the
Republican-leaning midwestern state had been erased. In the actual
election, Trump won Iowa by more than 13 percentage points.
“There was a perfectly good reason nobody saw this coming: because a
three-point lead for Harris in deep-red Iowa was not reality,” the
lawsuit said. “It was election-interfering fiction.”
The poll increased enthusiasm among Democrats, compelled Republicans to
divert campaign time and money to areas in which they were ahead, and
deceived the public into thinking Democrats were doing better than they
actually were, Trump charged.
The lawsuit was filed late Monday in Polk County district court in Iowa.
It cites Iowa consumer fraud law, and doesn't ask for specific monetary
damages, but rather wants a trial jury to award triple the amount of
what it determines actual damages to be.
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President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at
Mar-a-Lago, Monday, Dec. 16, 2024, in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP
Photo/Evan Vucci, file)

Whatever happens legally, the case could have a chilling effect
beyond Iowa. Trump said in legal papers that he wanted it to deter
“radicals from continuing to act with corrupt intent in releasing
polls manufactured for the purpose of skewing election results in
favor of Democrats.”
Lark-Marie Anton, Des Moines Register spokeswoman, said the
newspaper acknowledged the pre-election poll did not reflect Trump’s
ultimate margin of victory and released the data and a technical
explanation.
“We stand by our reporting on the matter and believe a lawsuit would
be without merit,” she said.
Selzer did not immediately respond to a request for comment on
Tuesday. But she told PBS in Iowa last week that “it's not my ethic”
to set up a poll to deliver a specific response. She said she was
mystified about what motivation people would think she had.
“To suggest without a single shred of evidence that I was in cahoots
with somebody, I was being paid by somebody, it's all just kind of,
it's hard to pay too much attention to it except that they are
accusing me of a crime,” she said.
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