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Trump’s false voter fraud claims set stage for turmoil

Trump's false voter fraud claims set stage for turmoil — again

Trump's false voter fraud claims set stage for turmoil — again

Donald Trump is being sincere with the U.S, he repeatedly gives the same message as more as he travels across the U.S to support and rally his ‘’ Make America Great Again ‘campaign, in all of his campaigns and postings, he says again and again that the November 5 elections are very important and if he loses, it will be only because if his opponents cheat with him. but the facts from different people explain that this is also just a myth which you will know by the end of this blog.

Trump said in one of his campaigns in a crowd in Georgia in early August, ‘We have to vote, we have to stop them from cheating because they cheat like dogs,’ his concern was, that we have to save America’s future. However, who is right, it will come after the final day of the election.

Trump’s false claims of widespread voter fraud, which have been repeatedly debunked, are not new. He has long argued that the U.S. electoral system is corrupt. However, as the election nears, experts warn that his rhetoric is becoming extreme. They fear Trump may attempt to challenge the results, similar to what he did in 2020.

There’s a growing narrative that something shady is happening in our election system,” said Sophia Lin Lakin, director of the Voting Rights Project at the ACLU. This false belief in voter fraud, she told Al Jazeera, could create chaos and undermine the election’s outcome.

We’ve seen this strategy before,” she said, “and it looks like Trump is doubling down on it in a more intense way.”

For example, while Trump won the Electoral College in 2016, which ultimately decides the presidency, he received fewer total votes than Clinton did. Shortly after his win, he claimed he only lost the popular vote because “millions of people voted illegally.”

Two years later, when Democrats gained control of the U.S. House of Representatives in the 2018 midterm elections, Trump again blamed “illegal votes.” In an interview, he suggested that voters would change clothes and vote multiple times.

However, election experts have consistently stated that voter fraud, the act of illegally casting a ballot, is extremely rare in the U.S. While clerical errors can happen in a system involving tens of millions of voters, there is no evidence of widespread fraud.

Study after study shows that voter fraud is incredibly rare,” said Sara Carter, an attorney at the Brennan Center for Justice. “The idea of widespread voter fraud is a myth. You are more likely to be struck by lightning in the U.S. than to commit voter fraud.

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