Saturday, 20 Apr 2024

‘Hatred has a great grip on the heart’: election denialism lives on in US battleground

‘Hatred has a great grip on the heart’: election denialism lives on in US battleground


‘Hatred has a great grip on the heart’: election denialism lives on in US battleground

The lead-up to Arizona's midterms saw tactics designed to disrupt the American democratic process in a battleground state where election denialism ran rampant. Though voters broadly rejected election deniers, the grip of their ideas remains strong among large portions of the right in the state, which is now at the forefront of the fight over democracy in the US.

"Voters in swing states sent a message that they were not receptive to election denialism. They didn't send that message everywhere," said Daniel I Weiner, director of the Brennan Center's elections and government program.

Weiner added: "There is going to continue to have to be built a greater consensus amongst Americans across the ideological spectrum that this is out of bounds. This election was reassuring. It certainly doesn't mean the election denialism has gone away, though."

As soon as voters started dropping off their ballots, people in tactical gear with guns started monitoring them. One rural Arizona county kicked off, then backed away from, plans to hand count all ballots. Arizona's Republican gubernatorial candidate, Kari Lake, said she wouldn't concede if she lost.

After election day brought printer problems in Maricopa county, the state's largest by population, the bluster and election denialism grew. The county has said those problems did not prevent voters from casting a ballot and that they will be investigated, but still some Republicans want a "re-vote," a new election, and some statewide candidates who lost have refused to concede their races.

Others are filing or preparing to file lawsuits, as legal letters fly from the state attorney general's office and the Republican party. One county refused to certify its results, only doing so under court order. Maricopa county supervisors faced a vengeful crowd, some part of a traveling group in a "QAnon-themed Scooby Doo van" that invoked God and country to condemn this year's election.

"I never could have imagined in county government that we'd see this kind of vitriol towards us, but I think that these people have been sold a story, a narrative, and they believe that very strongly," said Bill Gates, the Republican chairman of the Maricopa county board of supervisors. "And that narrative is that we are traitors, that we have violated the law, that we're Rinos [Republicans In Name Only]. They didn't come up with it on their own."

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