The latest right-wing media conspiracy theory about the vote count in the presidential election is both bizarre and highly specific: that a government computer system called “Hammer” and a software program known as “Scorecard” were used to alter the vote totals in key states, literally subtracting votes from President Donald Trump and adding numbers to President-elect Joe Biden. And now this absurd claim has made its way from the fringe of far-right outlets to the airwaves of Fox News.
The Daily Beast reports that this claim now originates from Dennis Montgomery, a former intelligence contractor whose computer programs in the early 2000s — purporting to find hidden Al Qaeda messages in broadcasts from the Qatar-based news network Al-Jazeera — were exposed as a fraud by the French government after it caused several international passenger flights to the United States to be grounded or turned around (and the Bush administration reportedly “even considered shooting down the planes based on Montgomery’s information”). He has also worked with Joe Arpaio, the disgraced, Trump-pardoned former sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona, and he filed a lawsuit in 2017 against former President Barack Obama alleging an illegal surveillance program that the judge dismissed as “a veritable anthology of conspiracy theorists’ complaints.”
This newest theory appeared via a conspiracy site called The American Report a few days before the election and claimed that the Hammer and Scorecard technologies are an outgrowth of Montgomery’s counterterrorism intelligence work — developing the same computer systems that were revealed to be frauds.
The right-wing media’s assorted conspiracy theories since Election Day have hinged on Trump’s earlier reported leads in key states evaporating after days of counting mail-in ballots — a phenomenon dubbed the “red mirage” which was predicted for months due to increased interest in mail-in voting among Democratic-leaning voters as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
Just to be clear, though: The mirage has occurred precisely because of decisions made by Republican officials, not Democrats. In the key state of Pennsylvania, for example, the Republican-controlled legislature did not pass changes requested by counties 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, thus causing Trump to apparently lead among voters on Election Day before the mail-in votes could be sorted and counted.
Last week on Election Day, while voting was still going on, former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon’s War Room livestream featured an appearance from retired Lt. Gen. Thomas McInerney to promote Montgomery’s conspiracy theory. A fixture of right-wing media, McInerney has previously promoted the racist “birther” conspiracy theory, circulated allegations about the 2016 murder of Democratic National Committee staffer Seth Rich, and he was banned from appearing anymore on Fox News in 2018 after he proclaimed that torture “worked on” Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) when he was a prisoner of war in Vietnam, saying, “That's why they call him ‘Songbird John.’”
McInerney claimed that this Hammer system was “still up and running, Steve, I’m sorry to say,” and that the Democratic National Committee “has been using this tool” in the election to change the votes in the election. He also claimed that this system was used against Sen. Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primaries and against Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney in 2012. McInerney also said that there was an attempt to use it against Trump in 2016 “and I can’t say on this radio why it failed, but it failed,” though it has been made “more robust” since then. (These statements echoed claims made in The American Report’s online posting.)
“These are all treasonous activities,” he added later. “And we cannot let them do it tonight. When the count starts coming in is when they put this software, Scorecard, on it. And that’s the danger that we’re facing.”