Remember President Trump’s claim that there was massive
voter fraud in the election? The controversy goes back to a Nov. 27 tweet
in which then-President-elect Trump said, “In addition to winning the Electoral
College in a landslide, I won the popular vote if you deduct the millions of
people who voted illegally.” The claim resurfaced in January as Trump claimed
that 3-5
million people had voted illegally and promised a “major
investigation” into the fraud.
That was about a week ago. How’s the investigation been
going since then? About as well as O.J. Simpson’s search for the real killer.
CNN
reports that the investigation seems to have faded away with little fanfare.
Citing an official in the Trump Administration, the report says that the
investigation is not dead, but is no longer a top priority.
A week ago, it seemed an Executive Order detailing the
investigation was imminent, now the source says, “I think there will be
something signed, but I don't think it will be now.”
Voter fraud of 3-5 million votes would represent about three
percent of votes cast in the election. If there is evidence that fraud on such
a massive scale occurred, it should be a high priority for the Justice
Department. Such fraud, if it existed, would undermine the integrity of the
entire election process.
In reality, state elections officials, many of them
Republican, say
that there is no evidence of fraud on the scale that Trump claimed. The
author of Pew study on voter fraud cited by Trump, tweeted,
“As I’ve noted before, voting integrity better [was] in this election than ever
before. Zero evidence of fraud.”
The Trump Administration’s quiet abandonment of the voter
fraud investigation fits his pattern of making outlandish claims and then
quietly abandoning them. It is a pattern that we will probably see more of over
the next four years.
Originally published
on The Resurgent
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