With Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden appearing likely to clinch the election on Friday against incumbent President Donald Trump, right-wing talk radio host Rush Limbaugh provided his listeners with a cornucopia of conspiracy theories about Democratic officials manufacturing votes to overcome what would otherwise have been a Trump landslide victory.
His propaganda creates an image of fraud at the polls — in contrast to actual election results — that would put Charles Foster Kane’s newspapers to shame.
Much of Limbaugh’s conspiracy theories hinge around Biden overtaking Trump’s earlier leads in key states after days of counting mail-in votes in heavily Democratic cities — a phenomenon dubbed the “red mirage” that was predicted for months due to increased interest in mail-in voting among Democratic-leaning voters as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
In fact, the mirage has occurred precisely because of decisions made by Republican officials, not Democrats. In the key state of Pennsylvania, for example, the state’s Republican legislature did not pass changes requested by the state’s counties, which would have allowed them to begin processing mail-in ballots before Election Day. As a result, they began the day with a tremendous backlog of envelopes to sort through, which are only now being resolved.
Limbaugh has been peddling a variety of conspiracy theories, such as falsely claiming there were more votes cast in Wisconsin than registered voters in the state — though the voter registration figure dates back to 2018, and since then the rolls have increased significantly. And during his show on Friday, he claimed that Republicans won some key down-ballot races, while Biden was pulling ahead in the vote count because Democrats were in a hurry and only manufacturing fake votes for Biden. (Just to be clear, the House and Senate races he has discussed are not connected to such contests as the presidential race in Pennsylvania.)
Limbaugh kicked off his November 6 show by reading from a column published at Fox News, written by Jason Whitlock of the right-wing sports site OutKick.com, decrying that “hate” had conquered “love” in the election — that is, claiming that dislike of Trump had was a greater motivating force among Democratic voters than love for Joe Biden, in contrast to Trump’s own supporters genuinely loving him.
Limbaugh commented further on his own. “I know, it doesn’t matter to anything now. But it matters to me, I’m sorry,” he said. “The guy that won did not have any kind of massive pro support. He was just the vessel. He was just the recipient of whatever anti-Trump sentiment there was out there.”