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delay in results raises fears of fraud

delay in results raises fears of fraud

Some results can take days and even weeks due to the characteristics of the US electoral system, a delay that could trigger questions and unsubstantiated allegations of fraudSome observers fear, the AFP news agency reported.

The far-right candidates of the Republican party who insist on ignoring Biden’s victory over Donald Trump in 2020 have used isolated incidents that occurred yesterday with some voting machines to promote what many believe is a campaign to question the results.

This Tuesday the Americans went to the polls to renew the majority of the governorships, a third of the Senate, the House of Representatives and other regional positions, in elections considered a tacit referendum of half the presidential term.

In several states the dispute between Republicans and Democrats is very tight. “After election night, the attention will be reduced”, the nonpartisan research group Association for Electoral Integrity said in a report.

“When people wake up on Wednesday … to discover that some disputes are still going on and that some of their candidates unexpectedly lost, they will turn their attention to the rumors that marked those disputes and amplify them,” the report added.

Eyes are on hard-fought fights in key states like Georgia, Pennsylvania, Nevada and Arizona, when just one seat can define the course of the Legislative power. “If we have tight elections, which particularly define the party that controls the United States Senate, misinformation will get worse,” said Professor Rick Hasen, director of the Saving Democracy Project at UCLA Law School.

“It has now become commonplace among Trump supporters to believe that it is common to steal elections in the United States, despite all the credible evidence to the contrary. And these kinds of allegations could come up again in close elections.”

More than half of the Republican candidates are “election deniers” and have endorsed Trump’s unsubstantiated claims that the 2020 election was rigged.

In this context, the disputes could lead to a prolonged period of uncertainty. “If the candidates do not admit defeat or decide to question the election, this period will be extended daily fed by stories from the day of the election or about the period of totalization (definitive scrutiny),” affirmed the report of the Association for Electoral Integrity.

Specialists also warn that right-wing “election observers”, mobilized by Trump supporters to look for alleged fraud, could unsubstantiatedly say that they could not detect anything because they were prevented from acting, which would increase the possibility of a violent confrontation.

The disinformation that floods social networks includes calls to violence subscribed by electoral paranoia theorists.

The SITE Group, which monitors extremists online, said the ultra-nationalists were promoting “armed and violent intervention” in Georgia’s totalization centers. The call, according to reports, It arose in response to the announcement of the extension of the electoral hours to consign the ballots in the mail after a logistical problem.

The Center for American Progress, another nonpartisan think-tank, believes that disinformation “will not only continue but will worsen in the post-election scenario.”

“Electoral deniers can make noise with baseless legal challenges. Politically motivated election officials can refuse to certify election results,” I write in a report.

Republican politicians like former President Trump began Tuesday to question the integrity of the electoral process after technical problems were reported in some machines in Arizona.

“Reports are coming in from Arizona that voting machines are not working properly in predominantly Republican/Conservative areas,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

“Can this be true just as the vast majority of Republicans waited to vote today? Again?”he added.

“Hard to know if we’re witnessing incompetence or worse,” tweeted Blake Masters, an Arizona Senate candidate who has Trump’s support.

The authorities of the county of Maricopa, in Arizona, said yesterday that about 20% of the 223 voting centers registered technical difficulties that do not jeopardize the accuracy of the count.

“People have spread misinformation about our elections in recent months,” Stephen Richer of the Maricopa County Recorder tweeted.

“In the coming weeks we anticipate more of this,” he added. “We are prepared to confront disinformation with the truth.”

Source: Ambito

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