WASHINGTON (Reuters) - For months, President Donald Trump has tried to convince Americans that the Nov. 3 election will be “rigged,” claiming without evidence that mail voting will open the door to mass cheating. Lawyer J. Christian Adams speaks during a hearing regarding voting discrimination, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S. September 10, 2019, in this frame grab taken from C-SPAN television footage. C-SPAN/Handout via REUTERS “The greatest Election Fraud in our history is about to happen,” Trump wrote on Twitter on Aug. 23. In making these claims, Trump has seized upon the idea that U.S. elections are vulnerable to rampant fraud. That once-fringe theory has become a staple of Republican politics, due largely to the efforts of a small network of lawyers who have promoted it for two decades, funded by right-wing foundations. |
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Election Watch Chronicling the attempts to undermine a fair election. Cleta Mitchell chairs the Public Interest Legal Foundation (PILF), an Indiana-based group dedicated to election integrity
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