Univision's online news show Edición Digital debunked a photo doctored by the alt-right with the purpose of fueling fears about immigrants committing voter fraud and intimidating Hispanic voters.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has spent the last few weeks of the presidential election stoking fears about the nonexistent threat of voter fraud, insisting that undocumented immigrants are voting -- they're not -- and encouraging his supporters to monitor polling locations in “certain areas,” causing Hispanic media to actively debunk these claims and the racist threats being subsequently emitted from Trump's “alt-right” followers. Univision has been on the forefront of this pushback.
During the October 31 edition of Univision's Edición Digital, reporter Rachel Glickhouse blamed Trump's rhetoric for a doctored “image circulating on Twitter that seems to demonstrate an immigration agent arresting someone who was waiting in line to vote,” an image that is “clearly” made with Photoshop. Glickhouse explained that other Twitter users rightfully called the image “a lie,” but “members of the ”alt-right" continue to divulge these falsehoods" about undocumented immigrants voting.
Glickhouse also reported that the “alt-right” movement has been on the rise, finding a comfortable space in the Trump campaign. Although the "alt-right" was once hidden in the confines of far-right white nationalist media outlets such as Breitbart News, Trump has reinvigorated their movement, giving them a platform to spread hate rhetoric and lies, such as the image meant to intimidate Hispanic and immigrant voters, which was just the most recent example of their racist attacks on the Hispanic community.
From the October 31 edition of Univision.com's Edición Digital: