Republicans across the country engaged in an aggressive campaign to undermine the 2020 elections through voter suppression, an effort that has continued in the wake of Donald Trump’s loss. As in past election cycles, this voter suppression was bolstered by a longstanding right-wing media campaign to delegitimize election results by constantly hyping flimsy accusations of “voter fraud,” an anti-democratic tactic which Trump aggressively embraced in his first presidential campaign and one he shows no indication of abandoning now that his reelection bid has been defeated.
Some of these right-wing media myths about voter fraud are well-worn and have been recycled (and debunked) repeatedly. Others are new, created to justify an ever-increasing effort to make it harder for Americans to vote against a conservative movement that just lost both the popular and Electoral College vote. And the outlets spreading all of these election lies are not slowing down. With the rise of social media and a conservative media ecosystem that rewards the most extreme demonization of political opponents, faith in our democracy is corroding at an alarming pace.
During a once-in-a-century pandemic that is spiraling further out of control, Republicans -- with the aid of their right-wing media enablers -- behaved in an anti-democratic fashion not seen since the Jim Crow era. In Michigan, they insisted that voters who need assistance in the delivery of their ballots must go without and pushed in court for absentee ballots that arrive late to be tossed (despite state efforts to the contrary). Their conservative colleagues in multiple other battleground states, including Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, North Carolina, and Minnesota, also tried to overturn similar election rules with the same anti-majoritarian strategy, leading to a flurry of last-minute Supreme Court orders over which attempts to restrict the franchise are permitted and which are too lawless for even a majority-Republican high court. But the list of such attempts is much longer than just these high-profile examples.
Republicans in South Carolina dredged up the witness requirement for voting. In Nevada, they tried to weaponize voter signature verification. In Alabama, curbside voting was apparently too accommodating even in a pandemic, and in Texas they one-upped that lack of basic decency by limiting ballot drop-off boxes to one per county, despite the now well-known fact that Houston’s Harris County has almost 5 million people. The list goes on and on, with one election law scholar who had been tabulating all the litigation arising around efforts by states to facilitate voting in a national emergency putting the current count at over 328 cases as of November 7.
And this doesn’t take into account the whirlwind of litigation that followed Trump’s clear presidential loss. Claiming massive voter fraud despite evidence to the contrary (just like he did in 2016), Trump and his Republican allies are currently challenging election procedures, ballots, and even vote certification in those battleground states and communities of color that voted for President-elect Joe Biden. Although these lawsuits are floundering in court due to the inability of Trump's legal team to substantiate their baseless claims of fraudulent election results, their dangerous effect is already apparent as poll after poll shows they are contributing to the delegitimization of our democratic process in the minds of Trump’s supporters. With the help of right-wing media, these constituents will be primed to support a new wave of laws designed to suppress the vote -- especially a Democratic-leaning vote -- when state legislatures reopen in January 2021.
This round of litigation will eventually end. Messily most likely, but the legality of all these attempts to restrict the franchise will be settled by the courts, for good or for bad. However, despite numerous attempts to fact-check, debunk, and demonstrably disprove them, the right-wing media myths that gave rise to so much of this voter suppression will unfortunately return for the next round of elections. Below is a selection of these right-wing media arguments sure to present themselves in a similar fashion in the future: