The Daily - The Republican Plan to Challenge a Harris Victory
Episode Date: August 22, 2024At the Democratic National Convention, party officials are celebrating polls showing that Kamala Harris is now competitive with Donald Trump in every major swing state across the country.But in one of... those swing states, Republicans have laid the groundwork to challenge a potential Harris victory this fall, by taking over an obscure, unelected board.Nick Corasaniti, a Times reporter who focuses on voting and elections, explains.Guest: Nick Corasaniti, a reporter covering national politics for The New York Times.Background reading: The unelected body that shapes voting rules in Georgia has a new conservative majority, whose members question the state’s 2020 results. They now have new power to influence the results in 2024.Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are in close races across Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina, crucial swing states that Mr. Trump had seemed poised to run away with.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From New York Times, I'm Michael Bobarro. This is The Daily.
At the Democratic National Convention, party officials are celebrating polls showing that
Kamala Harris is now competitive with Donald Trump in every major swing state across the country.
Today, the story of how Republican officials in one of those swing states have taken over
an obscure, unelected board to lay the groundwork for challenging a potential Harris victory this fall.
My colleague, Nick Korsanidi, explains.
It's Thursday, August 22nd. Nick, we're talking to you from the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, but you're
not there primarily to cover Kamala Harris's nomination.
Instead, you have been focused for a couple of years now on the Republican election strategy
for this election.
Yeah.
So what I've been focused on,
really, over the past four years, since the 2020 election
and the efforts of Trump and his allies to overturn his loss,
is this growing movement on the right
to kind of disrupt and erode and destabilize
the American electoral process.
A movement that really never went away,
even though many people stopped paying attention to it.
Exactly, this has been very much alive
and very much active, just more in the shadows.
This is a loose network of political operatives,
of activists, of lawyers, of local organizations
and national organizations, of conservative think tanks,
and sometimes even state Republican parties.
And they've been trying to find weaknesses
in the American electoral infrastructure.
And they've got a couple strategies
that they've really deployed over the past four years
to help get them there.
Such as what?
So one of them has just been changing laws regarding voting,
changing how votes are cast,
changing vote by mail strategies, changing who governs the electoral process.
But as we head into 2024, what's really come into focus is this obsession with the certification
system in the American electoral process.
And just explain that, the certification system.
So the way it's been described to me
by other election experts is that
when it comes to these officials' role
in the certification process,
it's almost like a scorekeeper in a basketball game.
They're watching as, you know, different points are scored,
they're tallying it up,
and when you get to the end of the game,
they look backwards and say, okay, all of these points,
let's make sure all of these points add up to the final score.
Okay, it does, this person won, this person lost.
Here it is, it's official.
There's no going back and investigating,
was there a foul committed in the second quarter?
You know, was the toe on the line in the third quarter
that should have been a three instead of a two?
That was the referee's job at the time.
The scorekeeper just tallies the score and people accept the scores.
And that's where these local election officials fit in to the certification process.
Their job is designed to be very important, but very simple.
Make sure the numbers add up and sign off on the results.
Right.
But over the past four years, these loose networks
of conservative election activists
and Republican-aligned groups have been trying to redefine
and even remake the certification process itself
in places all over the country.
And where do they find that certification can be challenged and where they could maybe play a big role in sowing doubts around this year's election?
So they've tried this wherever they can, but with little success.
You know, they've tried it in Arizona, they've tried it in Nevada, in Michigan,
and yet each time they've been running up against settled case law that kind of protects the certification process.
So now what some of these activists and organizations have tried to do is change that law.
And that's what brings us to Georgia.
Why Georgia?
So Georgia was a big surprise in 2020.
When President Biden won that by 12,000 votes,
it was the first Democrat to win in generations.
Yet former President Trump just wouldn't believe it.
And there was countless allegations of, you know,
suitcases full of ballots, corrupted machines,
all disproven multiple times.
So it's long been this kind of fever swamp
of doubts about elections that have festered now
for four years.
But this election is looking different.
For a long time, President Biden was trailing
former President Trump significantly in the state.
But with Kamala Harris at the top of the ticket,
it's suddenly very close.
Trump cannot afford really to lose Georgia.
If he loses Georgia, he has a very slim,
if any, path to winning the presidency.
And that's refocused a lot of the attention
on the longstanding effort in Georgia to find vulnerabilities
to ensure against a possible loss.
In just the past few months, they've had some of their most notable successes in infiltrating
or influencing the electoral process in Georgia.
And what does that success look like exactly?
Well, this really begins with the takeover
of the Georgia State Election Board, a five-member board.
Now, in the beginning of this year,
the board was pretty split.
You know, it takes three votes to pass a new rule.
And the majority of the board members
were either more moderate Republicans voting
to either preserve the status quo or you know improve rules along with one Democrat and
Then there were these other two members who were proposing new rule changes
One of them dr. Janice Johnson is a very close ally of those right-wing networks
You know we uncovered recordings of her participating in their meetings, huh?
But they didn't have the votes
to get these new rules through.
So the effort to really change that makeup
starts in February.
These two members proposed a rule
that would effectively get rid of mail-in voting
in the state.
They got shot down by the three majority.
And the key vote is cast by a man named Ed
Lindsay. He's a former Republican state legislator, and he really becomes the central target of
this campaign designed to force him to leave the state election board. And it's not just
the activists who are going after him. It's Trump-aligned think tanks.
It's the state party.
It's local Republican county officials.
Eventually, after months of this pressure campaign, the dam breaks in May and Ed Lindsey
steps down.
The Speaker of the Georgia House appoints his replacement, a woman named Janelle King,
who it becomes clear with the next few meetings will be siding with those other two members
on the board.
And so suddenly that three-two split swings in the other direction, and these more right-wing
members find themselves in a position of power with the ability to pass new rules and regulations.
And what does this new 3-2 majority start to accomplish and pass as a result?
The most significant thing that they did, and that's really happened in Georgia
for the right-wing election activist network,
happened a few weeks ago,
when the State Board of Election issued a rule
saying that local election officials at the county level
could conduct a reasonable inquiry
as they were certifying the election.
And that's all they said.
But when you read kind of between the lines there and you think about everything that's happened with certification
and the questions that came up in 2020 and since then, it seemed like a permissible window
that could give local election officials the authority to say, I have doubts about this election,
or I don't want to certify, or I need to see more evidence.
And we get into a situation where they could be running out
the clock and missing very important deadlines
that could create chaos, uncertainty,
or move something to the courts.
Nick, how do the three conservative board members
who passed this new rule describe it and defend it?
So I've talked to some of them and I've watched hours of these state election board meetings.
And the way they frame it is that we should all want investigations and ways to double check our election results to make sure they're secure.
And we're not changing the deadlines
that say you must certify by this date.
So they defend it as a step towards transparency.
But what a lot of election experts and Democrats
and even some Republicans,
including the Republican secretary of state in Georgia
said was, this will only lead to more questions.
And perhaps nothing confirmed their fears more that, you know, this was a plan to destabilize
election certification in the event of a Trump loss than former President Trump's own words
at a rally in Atlanta earlier this month.
Well, thank you. Trump's own words at a rally in Atlanta earlier this month.
Well, thank you. I'm thrilled to be back in the great state of Georgia. I love Georgia. Where he called out by name the three members of the Georgia state election board.
Janis Johnson, Rick Jeffries, and Janelle King, three people, are all pit bulls fighting for honesty, transparency
and victory.
They're fighting.
And one of them was in the audience.
Are they here?
Where are they?
Right in front of the Trump podium, Janis Johnston stood up and waved to the crowd.
Thank you.
What a job. Thank you. What a job.
Thank you.
And their response was an extensive ovation.
Thank you.
Wow.
Hmm.
So here you have former President Trump blessing,
seemingly, what these three conservative board members are
up to, seeming to encourage them to keep going and appearing to connect
the work that they're up to with his own campaign and political future in this election.
And I think it's important to take a quick step back and just think about how bizarre
it is that a presidential candidate knows the names of local election officials
in a state so well that he has to call them out by name and say that they're helping to
fight for his victory.
You know, I've been covering presidential campaigns now for over a dozen years.
You as well, Michael.
I can't ever remember hearing anything like that before.
Right, because it's never happened before.
A president has never taken an interest in the mechanics of the certification of an election before an election in a state like Georgia the way Donald Trump now has.
Exactly. And so it sends up a warning signal, not just for people in Georgia, but really
anyone across the country, Democrat, Republican, election official, anyone who's concerned
about this presidential election and people's willingness to accept its results. We'll be right back.
So Nick, I want to play out a scenario with you for this fall and how the story you've
been telling us so far might become the worst case scenario that a lot of people fear.
So let's say it's election day and these Georgia board of election rules are in place,
the results come in and they are extremely close. Maybe Kamala Harris is up by five, six,
seven thousand votes in Georgia and maybe the whole election rests on Georgia. Paint
the picture of what this might look like.
So this would exactly be the nightmare scenario that Democrats and election officials are concerned about across the country. So local election officials in Georgia
have to certify the election by November 12th.
Now, with these new rules in place,
imagine a county or two in Georgia,
and it doesn't even have to be Fulton County
or a county that would make it determinative.
It could just be any county.
Raise their hand and says,
I've got evidence of fraud, or even I have concerns and I need
to investigate this fraud.
And they continue their investigation and they blow past that deadline.
We're into our kind of first legal gray area here.
And now we're getting media attention.
And now the Trump campaign and Republican allies are making this a story and a political story.
And it creates this kind of movement similar to what we saw in 2020.
But I think what everyone has to remember about 2020 is there was a real vacuum of evidence.
So what these laws and these local officials would be doing is creating at least that veneer of evidence. So now
we're heading towards December 11th which is the federal deadline to certify
slates of electors to the electoral college and if we're still in this gray
area you could see a secretary of state or a governor saying well the election
is not certified I don't know what I can do here. Hmm, and
Missing that deadline furthers the political legitimacy of the doubts being spread by right-wing allies
And then we're in a pretty
Precarious position heading into Congress's certification of the Electoral College, which happens on January 6th
to Congress's certification of the Electoral College, which happens on January 6th.
Now there's pretext for say multiple senators
or members of the House to say,
well, there's evidence of fraud in Georgia
and who knows if that's all that we know about.
You know, there could be more.
And it becomes again, this political movement
using these veneers of evidence to possibly
throw into question the results in Congress.
And that's how it could spiral to a really dangerous place.
But it has to miss all of these checkpoints and lawsuits and places where courts could
come in to get to that. Well, let's talk about those checkpoints and potential places where such a scenario would
stop in its tracks and what Democrats, the Harris campaign and mainstream Republicans
who don't want this scenario to happen can do and are doing to try to ensure that this
doesn't come to pass.
Well, one big thing that they did in the aftermath of January 6th was Democrats
and Republicans in Congress passed a new law,
the Electoral Count Reform Act,
that sought to shore up any vulnerabilities
in the federal congressional certification.
Now, this is the first presidential election
where that law will be in place.
And while it may have set a
slightly earlier or tighter deadline for federal certification, it also took away
a lot of different avenues to try and penetrate or alter or undermine that
process. So it remains to be seen exactly how it functions and how it will be
challenged. But they're also trying to find very explicit case law,
state law that contain words like,
you shall certify an election, shall means must,
to make it so clear in precedent
that there's no wiggle room, you shall certify,
and the election must go forward.
And I assume they're doing that
because they want to present that information to a judge
in order to shut down any effort to question the election results.
Exactly. The courts become the avenue to force these local election officials or whoever is refusing to certify to certify the election.
And they have evidence of this working in the past at the state level. Arizona, there's been challenges to certification in the past
and the court has ruled pretty clearly,
no, you must certify.
The same thing has happened in multiple states
across the country.
So there's a good body of evidence and legal precedent
that these local election officials must certify.
There is no discretion.
And basically that means that if we were to go back
to our scorekeeper analysis, you know, you're the scorekeeper and tally up the scores and send them
to us. If there's issues, we have other means of investigating that or taking it to court.
What else are those worried about this scenario doing at the moment?
Well, I think you can look at just how big the legal effort and the legal teams are getting
on both sides.
And let's start with the Democrats.
They've hired hundreds of lawyers, both at the national level working within the Harris
campaign and the DNC.
And then they've worked with local lawyers in multiple battleground states who have expert
knowledge and ability to work within state law.
And they say it's the biggest legal team they've ever assembled.
On the Republican side, they've also been staffing up this massive legal team within
the RNC.
They call it their election integrity unit.
And what they've been doing at the moment is filing a lot of litigation that could be used as possible evidence of a problematic election.
Talking about cleaning voter rolls or challenges to absentee ballots that arrive after the election day but were postmarked before.
Similar arguments that we heard in 2020 now they're bringing them beforehand. And so what this amounts to is this legal arms race,
you know, where lawyers on both sides are prepping
for this post-election litigation battle
that really is happening at a scale
that we haven't seen before.
Nick, I'm curious what people expect might be the role of,
in the case of Georgia,
the state's two most important Republican elected officials,
the governor, Brian Kemp, the secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, who four years
ago stood up pretty courageously in the face of concerns from members of their own party
and said, no, everything looks to be quite kosher here, and they tried to shut down the efforts
to object to the results.
Do people anticipate that those two officials
will do the same this time around,
and might that be the thing that ultimately
closes out this effort to question the results?
Well, it certainly could,
and Secretary of State Raffensperger
has been outwardly critical
of the State Board of Elections already.
He's issued statements saying that they're changing rules state Raffensperger has been outwardly critical of the state board of elections already.
He's issued statements saying that they're changing rules too close to the election,
which is making it impossible for local election officials to keep up, which could create
errors.
You know, he's taking their own election integrity argument and using it against them, saying
that this is actually making our election less secure.
As for Governor Kemp, he's been very clear since 2020 that he's not willing to break
the law.
So if any of these certification battles come down to a court saying he must certify, he'll
do that.
He's a very conservative governor.
He was supportive of the new voting bills that a lot of Democrats and election experts
said was suppressive.
But he's also pushed back when Trump has really targeted him
on voting, including recently where he said,
why are you attacking me?
You need to go win an election, essentially.
So I wanna just level set with you for a minute.
It seems from everything you've described here
that this strategy in Georgia is very likely
to rear its head because all that has to happen is that a single local official needs to raise their hand and say under these new election board rules.
I have concerns and this cycle the scenario you described.
It's triggered we don't know how far it will go how long it will play out but it seems quite likely that some version of this scenario.
Could happen.
If the rule set by the state election board survives the likely legal challenges coming
and is still in place in November, then yes, I think we can probably expect at least one
county or one of the local election officials to raise doubts and start that cycle of uncertainty
that quickly moves into the political arena.
And that's where it's most potent.
Right, and as you've explained here,
what will feel a little bit different this time around,
2024 from 2020, is just how successful
these election deniers have become
at putting themselves in the positions of power of themselves becoming the scorekeepers as they are with the Georgia state elections board.
And so if they start to raise the questions, then it will mean these high ranking scorekeepers saying.
That something is wrong.
Somebody cheated and that may without any evidence at all, carry
real weight with those inclined to doubt the results.
Exactly. I think, you know, when we look at polling and we ask what was for a very long
time a simple question to answer, do you trust the results of elections? We've seen a large
percentage of Republican voters say no.
An AP poll about a year ago found that only 22% of Republican voters had a high confidence
that votes in the upcoming presidential election would be counted accurately compared to 71%
of Democrats.
Which means about 80% of Republicans don't have faith in elections.
Don't have high confidence that votes in the upcoming presidential election will be accurate.
We've seen really since the 2020 election,
an intensely partisan focus on what were once very apolitical bureaucratic positions.
Now these are going to be contested and there's going to be recruitment for these. And it's also very hard to quantify because we're talking about tens of
thousands of offices across the country.
And so it's a scale that we can't comprehend and where all the little
vulnerabilities could be or where all the little efforts to put
someone on an election board who's not going to act in good faith. That's perhaps the unfortunate
future of where this leads us.
Well, Nick, thank you very much. We appreciate it.
Thanks for having me. Well, Nick, thank you very much.
We appreciate it.
Thanks for having me.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
MIT disclosed that its first incoming class to be admitted since the Supreme Court banned
affirmative action experienced a precipitous drop in the percentage of Black, Hispanic,
and Pacific Islander students.
Compared to the class of 2027, which was admitted before the ban, in the class of
2028, the percentage of enrolled Black students at MIT dropped from 15% to 5%,
and the percentage of Hispanic and Latino students dropped from 16 percent
to 11 percent.
But the percentage of Asian American students rose from 40 percent to 47 percent.
The increase in Asian American students is notable because the Supreme Court's ban
on affirmative action was based in part on a lawsuit claiming that elite universities
have discriminated against Asian-American applicants
by holding them to a higher academic standard than other groups.
And...
Soon and very soon,
we're going to be teaching our daughters and sons about how this child
of an Indian mother and a Jamaican father, two idealistic, energetic immigrants, immigrants, How this child grew up to become the 47th president of the United States.
That is the best of America.
On the third night of the Democratic convention, Oprah Winfrey called on independent and undecided voters
to cast their ballots for Kamala Harris.
And Harris' running mate, Governor Tim Walz,
delivered a blistering critique of Donald Trump
and Trump's plans for a second term.
It's an agenda nobody asked for. It's an agenda that serves nobody except the
richest and the most extreme amongst us.
And it's an agenda that does nothing for our neighbors in need. Is it weird?
Absolutely.
Is it weird? Absolutely. Absolutely. But it's also wrong. And it's dangerous.
Today's episode was produced by Olivia Nat, Asta Chaturvedi, and Eric Krupke.
It was edited by Patricia Willens, with help from Lexi Diao and Michael Benoit, was fact-checked by Susan
Lee, contains original music by Dan Powell, Corey Schrepple, Rowen Imisto, and Diane Wong,
and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landfrock of Wonderland.
That's it for the Daily. I'm Michael Boboro. See you tomorrow.