Today, Explained - How Trump could steal the election
Episode Date: October 29, 2024Donald Trump doesn't want to let losing the election stop him from taking the White House. Politico's Kyle Cheney details the Trump plan to overturn a Harris win and explains what it would take to sto...p that from happening. This episode was produced by Miles Bryan, edited by Matt Collette, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by Patrick Boyd and Andrea Kristinsdottir, and hosted by Noel King. Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast Support Today, Explained by becoming a Vox Member today: http://www.vox.com/members A sign next to a gas station in Worthington, Pennsylvania. Photo by Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Discussion (0)
Candidate Trump, as you've likely heard, jimmied the Overton window up a few inches at a rally in Madison Square Garden on Sunday with racist, sexist, vulgar, wasn't even a particularly good joke and etc. commentary from speakers.
But did you hear the really weird part? The Speaker of the House Mike Johnson part?
Look at him, such a nice looking guy, just that little beautiful face with the glasses.
Got the little glasses.
Yeah, that was also weird.
But that's not actually what I'm talking about.
Just a little later, Trump turned to Speaker Johnson and he said this.
We can take the Senate pretty easily.
And I think with our little secret, we're going to do really well with the House, right?
Our little secret is having a big impact.
He and I have a secret.
We'll tell you what it is when the race is over.
This comment is making people nervous
because Trump does have a plan
for if he loses this election.
A reporter did some digging into it,
and that's coming up next on Today Explained.
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You're listening to Today Explained.
Kyle, go ahead, give me your full name and tell me what you do.
Sure. I'm Kyle Cheney. I'm a senior legal affairs reporter for Politico.
You recently wrote a big piece called The Very Real Scenario Where Trump Loses and Takes Power Anyway.
And it starts with a claim. If Donald Trump loses the election next week, he is going to challenge the results again.
Why do you feel comfortable making such a claim?
Well, first of all, that was the collective judgment of dozens of people we talked to about what they expect in that scenario.
But really, the answer is almost obvious in that Donald Trump is essentially telling us that.
He has said he can't lose unless there's some kind of massive cheating by Democrats.
If the election's not rigged, we're going to win.
He's describing massive cheating by Democrats,
even though it's not based on any real evidence.
We got to stop the cheating.
If we stop that cheating, if we don't let them cheat,
I don't even have to campaign anymore.
We're going to win by so much.
And has expressed such supreme confidence that he's going to win,
that he's conditioning his supporters to believe that anything other than a win is stolen from him. So he's essentially saying it almost explicitly.
And it's what we saw four years ago. So everyone expects it to recur.
Politico did not write a similar piece about Kamala Harris. Why not?
Similarly, the dozens of people we spoke to said, look, if Donald Trump wins the election,
he wins. There's, you
know, you'll see some protests, you'll see some legal challenges in a really close state. But if
Donald Trump is the winner, he's going to be the winner. All right, let's go through the chronology
as you laid it out in your story. You identified a bunch of discrete stages, starting with right
about now, the end of October through November 11th.
Where does the potential plan to steal the election start?
Well, what we said in the story was, you know, if you look at if you count this as step one or
phase one, it's already underway. And that is this effort to condition as many people as possible to
not trust the election results. So that's happening. That's Donald Trump's talking about this, you know, Democrats registering massive numbers of non-citizen voters, trying
to solicit illegal votes from overseas. Our elections are bad. And a lot of these illegal
immigrants coming in, they're trying to get them to vote. They can't even speak English. They don't
even know what country they're in practically. And these people are trying to get them to vote.
Again, no evidence of this. There are certain parts of the process that are being litigated,
I think, in a more legitimate way about how different safeguards and what the right safeguards
are. But there's no evidence that there's some massive orchestrated plot to get thousands and
thousands of unlawful people to register and vote. But he's saying that in part because it creates
that noise and pressure that he needs for later phases of the process.
So I think that's really step one. Step two is election night itself when we expect,
and everyone we talk to expect Donald Trump to either declare victory or at the very least cast doubt
if it seems like there's a Harris victory in the offing.
It's the same playbook he used in 2016 and again in 2020, where he still
refuses to admit he lost. If you look at the facts, and I'd love to have you do a special on it,
I'll show you Georgia, and I'll show you Wisconsin, and I'll show you Pennsylvania,
and I'll show you. We have so many facts and statistics, but you know what? That doesn't matter.
Okay, Americans are on edge. We're suspicious. Half the country is suspicious in one direction,
half in the other. Where does it go from there? So the next phase in the process after election night, obviously, we'll see some states being called. You might see some states that are too
close to call. It could be a couple of days before we get the final results. But assuming we're heading toward a Harris victory, probably
be a very close one. But the next phase is for the county and state election boards to certify
those results, canvas and certify the results. Four years ago, we saw Donald Trump try to
intervene in that process, lean on allies and state and county boards and tell them not to certify.
That didn't work, didn't get them anywhere. President Trump continued his assault on the
2020 vote today. And even as he claimed total election corruption in Arizona.
All 15 counties have certified their results.
The state's Republican governor was certifying Biden's victory.
But in the intervening four years, we've seen a lot of turnover on these boards,
and many of them are now populated with much closer allies.
I don't know if you've heard, but the Georgia State Election Board is in a very positive way.
This is a very positive thing, Marjorie.
They're on fire.
So if there's a state where Donald Trump wants to protest or reject or challenge the outcome
using those boards, he can ask those same officials and make it a different result this time.
Now, what's interesting about that is we talked to a lot of secretaries of state and other election
chiefs in different states, and they said, that's not going to amount to very much. They will make
a lot of noise, but we will go to court and force these boards to certify the
election. In their view, that's sort of a successful outcome. But if you're viewing this through the
lens of Donald Trump and what he wants to accomplish, in some ways that's actually right on
target because that gets him to say, these state and county boards have been forced to certify an
invalid election under pressure and duress by the courts, not because they think the election is legitimate. That's why I need help from other elected Republicans to reverse the outcome.
All right. Then the next date in your chronological timeline is December 11th. What goes on on
December 11th? So that is a really important dividing line in this process. That is called
the safe harbor deadline. It's something set out in federal law that says states have to send their certified election results to the federal government by December 11th in order for the results and their electors to be counted.
And so that's when you go from the sort of this very, again, administrative process where you're just tabulating votes and certifying them and then to the next phase, which is where you have state legislatures and ultimately Congress receiving those results and acting on them.
That's when the sort of the counting process is over and you're in this sort of political
power process of this entire situation.
What did we see in 2020 that makes you think December 11th is such a key date here?
Sure.
So in 2020, I think what people didn't
appreciate was that once the state certified and sent the results in, Donald Trump was not
going to be done trying to reverse his defeat. That was when the sort of pressure campaign
really ramped up again on state legislatures. The accusation, like much in the Trump case,
is unique. Federal prosecutors point to these seven states which Trump lost,
but where they allege he plotted to subvert the results with false slates of electors.
And this is interesting.
This was a process that was sort of overlooked in 2020 and now is very highly scrutinized.
But state legislatures under the Constitution essentially have the power to
decide who gets their presidential electors. And now most constitutional experts say they've
already made that choice. They've said it's a popular vote. And so the winner of the popular
vote gets those electors. But what Donald Trump did was surround himself with a bunch of lawyers
who adopted a sort of fringe theory and said those state legislatures can take
that power back at any time. They can say, we don't trust the election results. We think it's
tainted by fraud and irregularities. And we actually want to decide immediately, you know,
that we should appoint a different set of presidential electors and send those to Congress alongside the electors certified
by the governor.
That is the point in the process where that would happen.
If the governor certifies a slate that Donald Trump disagrees with and he wants an alternative
slate, he can lean on those state legislators to do that.
What happened with the fake electors after the 2020 election? So this is interesting. So in 2020, no state legislature did this. Trump wanted them to.
He asked them to over and over again. And they all said, show us your evidence of fraud and we'll
think about it. And he could never get them anything that was remotely convincing. And so
the state legislature is balked. This is sort of similar to what I said earlier.
A lot of those state legislators who stood in his way four years ago are gone and have been replaced by much more compliant, closer Trump allies.
That's number one. campaign, essentially, and the state Republican parties assemble slates of Republican activists
who called themselves legitimate presidential electors, signed documents saying they were
legitimate presidential electors, but were not. And they sent those documents to Congress.
And what happened was a lot of those people got charged with crimes for signing false documents.
16 people in Michigan now facing felony charges for acting as fake electors for Donald Trump
during the 2020 presidential election.
And it amounted to nothing because Mike Pence, then presiding over Congress, refused to even
recognize them.
They had no legitimacy at all.
What we point out in the story is if a slate of electors is backed by their legislature,
it's a little bit of a different story.
They actually have some legitimacy in the sense that a government authority has given
them its backing.
That was the big thing that was missing in 2020.
Could Donald Trump get legislatures to do in 2024 what they wouldn't do in 2020?
That could actually change the equation a little bit.
And if he did, if he was able to do that in 2024 this year, what would happen next?
I mean, then you're going to Congress. Congress receives electors that are, you know, after they
meet, the electors meet on December 17th this year and cast their ballots and send those ballots to
Washington. If there are competing slates of electors, you know, endorsed by state legislatures, presumably they would meet to and similarly send their documents to Congress.
So when Congress starts counting electors, you may get to a state that has two slates.
Now, that presents a sort of unprecedented controversy that we haven't really seen, where you have two government-backed slates of electors that come before Congress at
the same time. Now, one of the things that's also happened since 2020 is a federal law was passed by
Congress and Joe Biden that tries to prevent this scenario, basically puts a heavy thumb on the
scale in favor of the electors backed by the governor. But there is an open constitutional
question about whether state
legislatures do have that authority. And it would certainly have to go to court and be a big battle
over whether those alternate electors would also have to be considered by Congress.
And as you said, who controls Congress would really matter here.
This to me is probably the most important question of all. Who controls Congress,
you know, after the votes are counted on election day
and the days thereafter?
Because if you have a Democratic-led Congress,
number one, Kamala Harris is going to be the one
presiding over the January 6th session
where they count electors.
And so even if she had to introduce a slate
backed by a state legislature,
there's no universe in which Congress is going to count that alternate slate
for Donald Trump in a state where Harris was the popular vote winner. It just doesn't compute.
And so if Democrats control the House, and even if they narrowly lose the Senate, but you have
senators like Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski and others who have been averse to these efforts by Donald Trump,
you are not going to see this plan go anywhere.
If you have a Republican House, that's when you get into some of these sort of wilder scenarios where this effort could still succeed.
The final date in your timeline is January 6th.
Close listeners of the podcast may recall what happened four years ago on January 6th.
What would an attempted steal look like on January 6th, 2025?
So assuming you have a Republican Congress, assuming all these other steps in the process go as we sort of, again, very hypothetical for many reasons, but that's when you get
wild scenarios. It depends on who's the speaker. Is Mike Johnson going to be speaker again?
You know, but let's assume that he is the speaker and that he is totally on board with any effort by Trump to continue challenging the election as late as January 6th.
Well, then you have you have to have a situation where Mike Johnson says the federal law that passed in 2022 to prevent these election challenges, I don't think it's constitutional.
I don't think it binds Congress because if it does bind Congress, then we have to basically accept the results certified by the governors.
If we don't accept that it binds Congress, then we have a much messier situation where we may have to think about these legislatively endorsed electors.
We may not have to accept the process for
challenging electors and which ones we're supposed to accept. We can actually prevent Congress from
counting electors for Kamala Harris. And if we prevent either candidate from reaching 270
electoral votes, then the election goes to the House. But in a weird sort of way, where instead of just a
majority vote, it's actually a vote by state where each state gets one vote. And that process favors
Republicans pretty heavily. And so that's the scenario. That's sort of the ultimate capper on
this. If you get to that contingent election, they call it, you'd probably have a Donald Trump presidency.
Donald Trump and his associates are famously disorganized.
They have been in the past.
Does the Trump campaign know everything that you're saying?
Or are you giving them ideas?
Yeah, that's come up in a couple of my interviews.
They know all this.
They've gamed these scenarios out in 2020.
Some of the lawyers who were involved in that process are still out there saying similar things.
Some of the things I've talked about were scenarios they contemplated but didn't come to pass, partly because those legislatures never acted for them. Mike Pence, in one of his memos,
his final memo from his lawyer before January 6th said, look, if a state legislature
gives the green light to an alternate slate, we might have to consider them. But it never happened
because no legislature did that. And so they're well aware of these plans. And so are the Democrats
too. And they're also gaming out these contingencies and these wild scenarios, I think,
because some of them feel crazy to say, but we almost saw them come to pass four years ago.
And I think they don't want to get caught flat footed should crazy things happen.
That's Politico's Kyle Cheney.
Coming up, the plan to let's not do any of this, please.
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It's Today Explained. We're back with Kyle Cheney of Politico. Kyle wrote a recent piece called
The Very Real Scenario Where Trump Loses and Takes Power Anyway. Kyle, we talked in the first half of
the show about how Donald Trump could attempt to steal this election.
There has been a lot of preparation for that scenario.
What kind of safeguards do we have in place four years later?
Well, the number one safeguard is the federal law that passed in 2022,
signed by Joe Biden, passed by the Democratic-led Congress,
called the Electoral Count Reform Act.
Buried in the 4,000-page, $1.7 trillion spending bill is the Electoral Count Reform Act,
which Maryland Democrat Steny Hoyer says...
We'll ensure that we never see a repeat of the shameful and malicious attack on our democracy.
And what that did was it looked at the experience of 2020 and tried to close off as many routes as possible to stealing an election in 2024 and beyond.
It affirms that the vice president's job on January 6th is administrative.
It's ministerial is the buzzword.
And that just means she opens the envelopes, reads what the number says, and counts them. Essentially, it doesn't have any discretionary role in deciding what to count, what not to count,
or how the process should work.
A lot of Democrats believe that was the case in 2020, but they wanted it explicitly written into the law.
It hardens some of the deadlines throughout December for when states must certify,
when the electors must meet, which is a double-edged thing.
It ensures that there's no
gamesmanship on these things, but also means if you miss a deadline, that could have pretty severe
consequences. And that's, you know, one of the things we didn't really talk about was if there
are lone wolf attacks or bomb threats or riots or efforts to block some of these procedures from
moving forward, and you miss a deadline as a result, that creates a whole different sort of chaos.
But those deadlines are meant to ensure
that there's no gamesmanship around
when these steps in the process take place.
Okay, so we do have this new federal or national law.
What about at the state level?
Are there any new safeguards there?
There are.
I think a bunch of states saw the chaos of 2020 and realized that they had to update
their processes.
And so that includes things like pre-canvassing votes that were received early.
A lot of states didn't even look at the votes they received until the vote, the polls closed
on election night.
And what that did was lead to massive delays in counting votes.
And of course, what that does is fuel conspiracy theories. All these sudden vote drops overnight and the, you know, why are we counting votes after election
day? And like, there will be absolutely be some of that this time around too. However, I think
states mostly accounted for that in an attempt to at least limit or minimize that. And more news
tonight, a late night deal in Lansing will give local clerks
more time to process absentee ballots before election day. Number two is you have state
courts have recognized that some of their processes were too slow. Post-election, you have
very tight windows, very tight deadlines that we just talked about. And if courts aren't operating
at the speed of those deadlines, you may have challenges that linger. And that fuels conspiracy
theories, too. Why aren't the courts taking up our challenges? Why aren't they looking at the
evidence? What are they afraid of? So courts have expedited their election-related procedures
to ensure that challenges get heard. The Electoral Count Reform Act that we mentioned actually
includes a provision on that, that if a presidential candidate wants to challenge the outcome
in a state, it gets expedited through the courts in a different way than it has in the past.
So that should help as well, at least show everyone that those challenges are being taken seriously.
And then finally, we have the other candidate. What is the Harris team doing to stop an attempted
steal? How ready are they? I mean, she was asked about this. And I think that the problem is they
don't want to talk about what happens if Donald Trump tries to steal an election.
They're just worried about winning in the first place.
And I'm very much grounded in the present in terms of the task at hand. And we will deal with election night and the days after as they come.
And we have the resources and the expertise and the focus on that as well.
So they're hesitant to get into these sort of war gaming scenarios of if I win,
but Donald Trump doesn't accept it.
They just want to say we need to win first.
So that her, you know,
she has expressed confidence that she has teams of lawyers ready for every
contingency. I think, I think that's true. They, you know,
both parties have really marshaled their best lawyers for all of these
processes. What we don't know is, you know,
who's the sort of team that will be around Trump
if he takes some of these extreme steps. He had a team four years ago, you know, John Eastman and
Ken Cheesebro and some of the people who have actually been charged criminally over some of
their actions at that time. Who's going to step in and fill those roles this time? And, you know,
I assume they will have learned from what was deemed to be criminal last time and would operate a bit differently, but they may still have strategies
that get into some of these parts of the process. The attitude of the Harris campaign right now,
how would you characterize it? Confident, nervous? What do you think?
I think confident that they're prepared for these contingencies, but I think they
are expressing at the very least, like they have people whose
job it is to think about these things. And that includes not just lawyers for the court battles,
but people in Congress who are strategizing how to handle the January 6th session.
And, you know, allies in states that they're particularly confident because every secretary
of state is either a Democrat or a Republican who has shown they're serious about the process,
like a Brad Raffensperger in Georgia.
I'm not going to fold to these sort of undemocratic efforts.
For the record, this year, if the presidential candidate of the other party wins,
will you enforce election certification for that winner?
I'm going to make sure that whoever wins this race, that is what gets certified.
I'm going to follow the law and follow the Constitution. I'm going to do my job. And that's what the people of Georgia have elected me to do.
You have laid out that this is a long shot scenario. It is a long shot scenario for Donald Trump to successfully steal the election should he lose. There will be a lot of steps here. Why indulge this? How concerned should we be that this long shot scenario becomes
reality? I think it's important to keep that in mind. It is a long shot scenario. It really
depends on a lot of things falling into place in exactly the right way. The reason to take it
seriously is because of what we saw four years ago. The system has adapted to that and tried to do things that would prevent it again,
but it's not impossible.
We've seen, you know, extremism on the rise, threats on the rise at every phase of the process.
We see a candidate who's going to be more motivated than ever should he lose
to try to, A, again, claim fraud, and B, do whatever he can to reverse it.
Because one thing, you know, this is just an obvious fact we pointed out.
Donald Trump loses.
He's staring down four criminal cases that could define the rest of his life.
And so he, at the very least, is going to be highly motivated in a scenario where he
thinks he has a path to reverse an election to do that.
It's worth being aware of all of these eventualities.
I mean, no people are thinking about them at every level, states, Congress, at every phase.
They're thinking about these already,
so it's important to sort of air out
the things that they're thinking about
and concerned about.
That was Politico's Kyle Cheney.
Miles Bryan produced today's episode.
Matthew Collette edited.
Patrick Boyd and Andrea Christensdottir engineered.
I'm Noelle King.
It's Today Explained. you