The NPR Politics Podcast - Trump Won. What Happens to His Election Fraud Movement?
Episode Date: November 13, 2024Donald Trump's election win took the wind from the sails of his election fraud conspiracy movement. Following Vice President Harris' concession, the early stages of post-election administration went s...moothly and largely without controversy, a stark contrast to the aftermath of the 2020 election. But are election lies going away?This episode: White House correspondent Deepa Shiviram, voting correspondent Miles Parks, and correspondent Shannon Bond.The podcast is produced by Jeongyoon Han, Casey Morell and Kelli Wessinger. Our editor is Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Oh my gosh, I love that so much. Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Deepa Shivaram.
I cover the White House.
I'm Miles Parks.
I cover voting.
And Shannon Bond, who covers how information circulates online, is here with us.
Hey, Shannon.
Hey, guys.
All right.
So today on the show, we're talking about the future of election fraud, lies and conspiracies,
now that Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election.
And Miles, we're going to start with you with your reporting here. lies and conspiracies now that Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election.
And Miles, we're going to start with you with your reporting here.
It's sort of a wind has been taken out of the sails, air is deflating out of the balloon
kind of a situation.
At least that's what some election officials are saying.
Is that right?
Yeah, I've been talking to election officials all week and, you know, before leading up
to the election, I'm from Florida, Deepa, and the feeling I kept getting leading up
to the election as I talked to election officials
was that feeling when I was a kid when you knew a hurricane
was coming right for where you live
and you're doing all this preparation.
You really don't know what's coming.
And now, but it's like when the hurricane moves
at the last second and hits somewhere else
and you've been preparing, your house
is full of sandbags and all this stuff,
and yet it's sunny outside.
It's so quiet for most election officials out there.
I mean, they're still doing the work of counting. They've got
weeks of audits still to come, things like that. Certification has just begun
in many many localities and it's gonna go up to the state level. But on a whole
election officials are looking around and thinking about how different this
looks compared to what they were expecting. I asked Lisa Tollison about
this. She's a county clerk in Rock County, Wisconsin. Here's what she said
It's completely different. I was you know, this time four years ago. I was getting nasty phone calls
Constantly in my office and we had police protection for a while and it's been very quiet
One person at my board of canvas one observer in 2020. I had 12 to 15
I don't think quiet was what we were expecting at all. No, not at all. And honestly, I think the important thing to note here is the actual specifics of how
the election was run are just not that different from 2024 to 2020 in terms of election officials
did the same thing.
People voted and they counted those votes.
The difference is the outcome.
I mean, that's what election officials across the board are saying.
Donald Trump winning just kind of changed the game around a lot of these narratives.
It's really like people did their jobs four years ago, people did their jobs this month.
But Shannon, I mean, there are still some elements of this that are kind of still being
sorted, right?
Yeah.
I mean, I think we need to remember that there's this election denial movement really that
Trump has inspired over these past four years.
And they've spent that time building up this community, this infrastructure around the
idea that there is rampant election fraud and that you need
to be looking out for it. And so, you know, it was, I mean, it was quite striking for
them too. And the idea that, you know, they were sort of building up this idea that there
was fraud, you know, in the, in the weeks ahead of the election, even through election
day and Trump himself, you know, I think at one point posted on Truth Social on election
day about, you know, fraud
happening in Pennsylvania.
Then of course, returns start to come in and a lot of that talk immediately died down.
But we then saw some sort of spins on it happening, right?
So there was this particular narrative twist that was happening among folks who, you know,
had long been claiming that 2020 was stolen.
The idea was that the 2024 results, Trump's victory,
actually validated those claims.
And one of the things people were seizing on,
especially in the first days, right after election day,
as ballots are still being counted,
was the idea that there were these differences
in vote totals.
And particularly this idea that Kamala Harris did not
appear to be getting as many votes as Joe Biden had
back in 2020.
And so this idea that there were these missing Democratic votes, you saw folks seizing on
those and saying, well, look, we were right, like 2020 was stolen, because how could so
many fewer Democrats be voting?
Now, of course, we all know it takes a long time to count ballots.
I live in California where election officials are still counting ballots.
And so what you've seen is in the past week, obviously the total votes for Kamala Harris
has actually increased, but there is still this sort of persistent narratives as well
as some narratives around certain Senate races like Kerry Lake in Arizona, where you're still
seeing people kind of grab onto this idea that maybe this justifies the idea that there
was fraud back in 2020 or maybe there was still some problems in 2024.
The new reality, right, Shannon, is that there is going to be garbage online no matter what
is happening.
And I think it feels like to me that the difference is whether there's kind of real world impact
from all that garbage happening online.
And like we are still seeing a lot of the claims being made, but that it doesn't seem
to be rising to people actually acting on it in the same way as 2020.
I'm curious from both of your perspectives as folks who covered this so intensely, like
not even just the last several months, but like four years plus now of tracking all of
this stuff.
Are you shocked by how this played out in the immediate aftermath of this election?
I'm not. I mean, honestly, I think when you actually look at the incentive structures
of election denial, the idea of trying to undermine the legitimacy of elections, if
you win an election, you are not incentivized in the same way to lie about those results
than if you lose the election. And so I think at the simplest way, I guess it just kind
of makes sense a little bit to me. What about you, Shannon?
Yeah. I mean, I did wonder sort of what was going to happen if it became very clear, you
know, relatively quickly as it did that Trump won. And I do think we've also seen a little
bit of people, you know, in this election, quote unquote, election integrity movement,
you try to claim that, you know, the reason that there wasn't a steal, there wasn't a rig this
year was because of the work they have done over the past four years.
And the other thing I think that's sort of been not surprising to me is that the fact
that we do still have people seizing on some of this.
I mean, our election system is complicated and it is different from state to state.
And there's all sorts of different rules and the counting process is still confusing
to people.
And so all of that stuff does sort of create
the breeding ground.
So it's not surprising to me we're still seeing some of this.
But I think the thing that Miles really captured,
this idea that it's not translating into actual action,
I think a huge part of that is that you don't have
that message from the top, right?
Like Donald Trump is obviously accepting his victory.
And so that's not setting the tone for people to really act on these theories that they
have.
But I do think there's this open question that I'm really interested in, and how this
changes his views about the 2020 election.
I doubt it's going to be some sort of press conference on January 21st where he says,
actually, I've changed my mind about a lot of stuff.
But as I've been talking to Republicans over the last few days, I think I've gotten a lot of conflicting answers on the expectation
on whether Trump is going to find a way to stop talking about 2020 as much as he did
previously because it does kind of take away from the fact that he is going to win the
popular vote here in 2024.
One would assume that is going to be what he focuses on, but it's really hard to predict Trump, right?
And so I'm really curious to see how the narrative
around 2020 comes from the top.
Yeah, and to be clear, like we should point out
that Donald Trump still never admitted
that he didn't win in 2020.
So, you know, keep that in mind through all of this.
All right, we're gonna take a quick break
and we'll have more in a moment.
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And we're back. And there are still ballots being counted. There were some conversations,
potential concerns about the process being held up, but it doesn't appear that that is
happening.
No, we're seeing across the board certification has begun in a lot of localities. Georgia,
for instance, just certified at the local level across the state. And there were a lot
of concerns leading up to this election that people who were emboldened by Trump would
potentially, we saw this in earlier election cycles, would decline to certify or would
vote to decline to certify. And we did not see that anywhere in Georgia yesterday.
Certification has gone smoothly there and it's gone smoothly across the country.
We have not seen any of these fears around certification bubble up.
And most experts think that's because Trump won.
There is some election conspiracies on the left that are floating around.
But the big difference, Shannon, is that there's no one with political power amplifying them.
The scale on how much this has spread, how many people are maybe spreading this information,
it's just astronomically different.
Yeah, that's right.
I mean, we're seeing some of these same dynamics around counting, right, and the idea that
there are differences in vote totals and differences in turnout being used by some folks on the
left to say, hey, you know, there's something fishy going on here. Where do these votes
go? You know, maybe Trump cheated, which again, like there's no indication that happened.
All election officials and the intelligence community and cybersecurity officials have
said this has been a very secure election. But, you know, we are seeing some of that
happening. But you're right. It's not sort of taking off in the same way. There have been some individual posts on platforms
like X or Meta's threads or Blue Sky that are, you know, in some cases have gotten millions
of views, but we're not seeing the sort of broader network effect happening. And you
know, there's a couple reasons for this. First of all, there's this sort of idea that researchers talk about of evidence generation
infrastructure.
I know that sounds like a mouthful.
The idea is that on the right, you've had this whole sort of community of folks who
spend their time like digging through to find evidence that there is something wrong with
elections, that there is issues with counting.
You've seen the videos go viral, right?
Or the pictures people are taking saying hey is someone pulling up a
you know box of ballots out right and and you know unfairly putting them in or problems with with voting machines
There just is not that same kind of content being produced on the left
There's also on the left
There's just not the same kind of network of these high-profile
Influencers and partisan media outlets who are then willing to take these claims and amplify them and that we've seen so developed over the past four years.
When I spoke to researchers at the University of Washington who have been studying election
fraud, the way they put it is there's just no left-wing equivalent of the 2020 stop the
steal mobilization effort.
And that's the thing.
I mean, 2020, that was what was so extraordinary about 2020 was Trump's actions, not the idea that there's a portion of the population who denies election results.
That has always existed in a small faction in American elections. If you have elections,
there's going to be some portion of the population that has an issue with how they were run.
I mean, we did see this a lot in 2004, in the 2004 presidential election. There were
a lot of conspiracy theories that year about voting machines in Ohio, for instance, but
you didn't see John Kerry coming out and saying that and saying, I will not concede
to George W. Bush.
What one expert said to me one time was that 10% or 15% of the population will always believe
conspiracy theories.
It's just a question of whether you have political elites parroting those things, and that's
how you get to the place where we are right now, where more than a third of Americans question the election integrity.
Well, yeah.
I mean, Shannon, to your point in the story that you had that came out this week on NPR
was folks who were spreading that hashtag of asking Kamala Harris not to concede.
I definitely woke up on Wednesday morning and saw that in a flood of my feed on acts
of people being like, my ballot was never counted.
How come Democrats aren't talking about this? and a flood of my, you know, feed on acts of people being like, my ballot was never counted.
Like, how come Democrats aren't talking about this?
And then, you know, literally hours later, she conceded the race.
And in your reporting, I mean, those hashtags, even the number of hashtags that were being
tweeted out, declined.
That's right.
That's right.
And that just shows you, like, how important it is that that tone is set from the top and
the role really ultimately that Trump played in the 2020 Stop the Steal movement,
that is like the major, major difference here.
And you know, I think that's probably encouraging, right, in terms of we're thinking about like,
you know, how do we deal with the fact, as Miles says, like, there's always going to
be some portion of the electorate that is distrustful of things or that might be spreading
rumors and conspiracy theories.
I think it's important to know it really does make a difference to people with the biggest
megaphones, what they are saying, what they are deciding to encourage.
That being said, though, I mean, one in three Americans being distrustful of the process,
even though it's maybe amplified at the top sort of a situation, it still affects so many
people both on the left and on the right.
Yeah.
And as we talked about, this idea that you've had Trump set that tone,
and then you have had this entire sort of cottage industry pop up, right, of people
who are more or less like professional election deniers. You have folks who go out and do
like events across the country, you know, drawing people to come and hear them speak.
You have folks like Dinesh D'Souza, the right-wing commentator who was one of the people who, you know, making these initial claims last
week about the idea that they were, these supposed missing votes proved that 2020 was
stolen. You know, he made a documentary about, you know, alleged ballot mules in 2020, sort
of claiming to prove fraud back then. You know, he has written books. Like, there are
people who do kind of make money off of this, have figured out ways to
monetize election denial.
And I don't think the idea that Trump won in 2024 is going to stop, you know, some of
these folks from continuing to try to monetize that message.
But I will say, I do think that there's a portion of that population that is kind of
distrustful right now in elections that election officials see, at least anecdotally in
the last week, they do see the quiet right now as a huge portion of it is because Trump won, but I
think they're also saying, we've been working on this for four years, trying to educate people.
And I think when you look at how people feel about the election system, so much of it goes back to
what the candidates say. Think about early voting know, early voting is a good example. 2020, Republicans were very distrustful and wanted to vote on election day. This time around,
Donald Trump and other Republican candidates say, no, go vote early. And you saw Republicans do
that. And so I think a portion of that distrust is malleable at this point. I think it's a question
of how much is actually baked in versus if this idea of election
denial just became a little bit less mainstream or even less talked about.
I think it's unclear at this point how much of that population would still keep believing
these things.
All right, Shannon Bond, thanks so much for joining us.
Thanks for having me.
Let's leave it there for today.
I'm Deepa Sivaram.
I cover the White House.
I'm Miles Parks.
I cover voting.
And thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.
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