As I’ve written before, there is no way to know – and no way to prove, which is far more important – that there was enough fraud to have determined the outcome of this election. That doesn’t mean there can’t be very strong suspicions.
But I’ve noticed in the comments here and elsewhere a number of people saying something like, “Oh, so you think this election was pure as the driven snow?”, as though that would be the only alternative way to look at it: fraudulent election or squeaky-clean election.
So I decided to write a post about the range of possibilities I see:
(1) No fraud, just a straight election helped by the Gramscian march and media lies, leading to a good showing by Democrats despite how poorly they’ve governed.
(2) No fraud, but the Democrats’ legally exploiting the more relaxed voting rules (ballot harvesting, for example) changing the results in their favor from what they would have been without those rules changes.
(3) Some fraud occurred in some places, but it didn’t affect any elections that wouldn’t have gone that way anyway.
(4) Some fraud occurred in some places, and it affected a few election results.
(5) Some fraud occurred in some places, and it affected many election results.
What point of view a person holds on this issue helps determine whether the person sees a solution, and if so then what the solution might be. However, I do believe in general that focusing on fraud depresses voter turnout on the right, amplifying the effect of whatever fraud has occurred. So it has a significant downside.
I also strongly believe that the voting rules must be tightened up anyway even if there was no fraud or not much fraud. I have said since 2020 that the perception of fraud is nearly as bad as fraud itself, although the two go somewhat hand in hand. Once the rules are relaxed, the perception of possible massive fraud is basically unavoidable. However, how they can be tightened up again is a difficult problem to solve unless a state is already red, as I wrote in this post from yesterday.
It’s a race between voting security and the Democrats’ argument about voting “suppression”. Note, by the way, that Europe comes down on the side of voting security; we are perhaps the only nation that votes in the bizarre fashion that now seems to have become law in so many states.
Commenter “Geoffrey Britain” has asked, “on what basis can we assume that they are not engaged in fraud to the maximum of which they are capable?” That’s a good question, I believe. I think the answer is that of course they might be engaged in that much fraud, and anyone is welcome to assume it. However, they might not be able to engage in as much outright fraud as one might think, even with the new rules. Remember back in 2020 how many allegations there were that GOP observers were ejected from their posts and that counting went on without them in many Democratic strongholds? Or that they were forced to “observe” from so far away that it was meaningless? In 2022, if there have been any such allegations, they have been few and far between. It also may be that the Democrats realized that maximally exploiting the loopholes in the newer rules regarding ballot harvesting and the like would be enough to give them victory. If they knew that would do the trick, why commit fraud and risk getting caught?
At any rate, we’ve also learned that once an election has taken place and winners announced, there is no going back even in the unlikely event the courts were to rule there was fraud. So this election will be over as soon as the final results are tallied. I believe it’s counterproductive to use assumptions about fraud as an excuse not to look at all the other problems that might be able to change things for the better if they were solved. That may be an insurmountable task as well, but that’s the way forward in my opinion.