Do-over!
by Tom Sullivan
Image via WECT Communities/Flickr, CC BY-ND 2.0.
The NC State Board of Elections voted unanimously late Thursday afternoon to hold a new election in its 9th Congressional District. The vote ended a months-long inquiry into election fraud in the eastern end of the district in 2018.
The decision came at the end of four days of dramatic testimony that exposed what Kim Strach, the board's executive director, described as “a coordinated, unlawful, and substantially resourced absentee ballot scheme” in Bladen and Robeson counties.
Dr. Mark Harris, the Republican candidate and Charlotte evangelical minister, spent much of the morning on the witness stand doing damage control after his son John's devastating testimony on Wednesday.1. What happened yesterday in North Carolina was one of the most extraordinary things I’ve ever seen in politics.
— Judd Legum (@JuddLegum) February 21, 2019
For months, Mark Harris claimed he was SHOCKED to learn a campaign operative was running an election fraud scheme
Then his son testified https://t.co/Dkof34zqZo
When the board reconvened, Harris took the stand again and explained that he had been mistaken about that recollection — and had in fact told his younger son, Matthew, in the phone conversation Tuesday evening, that he did not expect those emails to surface the next day.The State Board had heard plenty to convince them election fraud had occurred. There was no way under the national klieg lights the board of three Democrats and two Republicans could certify the election without adding humiliation to embarrassment. If they deadlocked, the U.S. House had the power to insist on a new election anyway. A unanimous vote was the only face-saving move and the right thing for voters. They voted 5-0 to call a new election and that was that.
Harris said the episode made him realize that he was not prepared for the “rigors” of the evidentiary hearing. He called for a new election, then promptly excused himself from the proceeding and walked out.
There was no evidence that this happens. In fact, there’s no evidence that in-person voter fraud happens at any significant scale. But there’s recurring political benefit in claiming that this happens. For Trump, it allows him to soften the blows of political losses, as with the midterms and as with his loss of the popular vote in 2016 to Hillary Clinton, after which he falsely claimed that millions of votes had been cast illegally. (Trump’s effort to prove the existence of such fraud by forming a commission early in his presidency soon collapsed.) For Republicans more broadly, claims of rampant in-person voter fraud have allowed them to advocate voter ID laws that have the happy side effect of tamping down turnout from communities that tend to vote for Democrats.From voter ID to citizenship requirements to increased documentation to restricting voting machines and polling stations in minority neighborhoods, the GOP has devoted decades of effort toward shrinking the Democratic electorate — to borrow from Grover Norquist — down to the size it could "drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub."
Yet here, where the alleged fraud involved absentee ballots (which an expert told me in 2014 was a potential threat to the integrity of elections), there has been almost no outcry from Republican elected officials. Trump hasn’t mentioned the situation in North Carolina. A review of congressional tweets shows no Republican officials who have linked the events in the 9th District to their party’s campaign against voter fraud — and plenty of Democrats who have noted that silence.
We never, ever need to listen to the voter fraud charlatans again. They created a vivid voter fraud fantasy, conjuring up busloads of illegal immigrants or college students stealing seats from upright, patriotic Republicans and delivering them to undeserving Democrats across the nation. The truth is, the myth of voter fraud is nothing more than a ploy to justify laws that make it significantly harder for racial minorities and the poor, constituencies that often lean toward Democrats, to exercise their constitutional right to vote.The only democracy the fraudsters support is one in which they control the outcome.