Texas GOP perpetuates debunked voter fraud claim in fundraising mailer
The claim: ““Seventy four thousand … That’s how many mail-in ballots were recently found in Arizona that have NO clear record of being sent in. That’s exactly why we are fighting so hard for election integrity in Texas.” — fundraising mailer sent by the Republican Party of Texas.
The claim stems from a recent audit of the November election in Maricopa County, which includes Arizona’s largest city, Phoenix.
PolitiFact rating: Pants on Fire. The claim, which has been repeated by Trump and others, has been roundly debunked, both by past and present Maricopa County election officials.
Discussion
The Texas GOP sent the mailer in mid-July in an attempt to attract donations for upcoming congressional races.
Arizona’s preliminary audit results also caught the attention of former President Donald Trump, who issued a statement repeating the same finding: “it seems that 74,243 Mail-In Ballots were counted with ‘no clear record of them being sent.’”
The Arizona audit chief is Doug Logan, the chief executive officer of Cyber Ninjas, a cybersecurity firm hired by Arizona Senate Republicans. Cyber Ninjas had no prior experience in election auditing before it was hired, and Logan was an advocate of “stop the steal” conspiracy theories.
The Arizona state Senate held a hearing on the ongoing audit July 15. in which they announced preliminary results. In a Twitter thread that Maricopa County election officials published during the Senate hearing, they said that the audit results are “not based in fact.”
During the Arizona Senate hearing, Logan said that a clerical error could explain the 74,243 figure.
“We have 74,243 mail-in ballots where there is no clear record of their being sent. … That could be something where documentation wasn’t done right — there was a clerical issue, there’s not proper things there — but I think when we’ve got 74,000, it merits, you know, knocking on a door and validating some of this information,” he said, referring his suggestion to visit voters door to door as part of the audit.
During the hearing, Logan said he based the 74,000 number on two types of early voting reports issued by Maricopa County. But his understanding of what the two files represent was contradicted by Maricopa County officials.
Logan said that the EV32 file shows when mail-in ballots are sent, and the EV33 file shows when mail-in ballots are received by the county. The discrepancy between the two files accounts for Logan’s 74,243 figure.
However, Maricopa County election officials tweeted that the EV33 and EV32 files are “not the proper files to refer to” for a complete accounting of all mail-in ballots sent and received.
A former Maricopa County election official said the two files are created for political parties to aid them in their get-out-the-vote efforts during early voting, according to the Associated Press. The county is required to provide this data to political parties per Arizona law.
Furthermore, the county data shows both mail-in ballots and early in-person ballots as early votes, and both are included in the EV32 and EV33 totals.
Lastly, the two files capture votes submitted during different time periods. While the EV32 file includes all requests that voters made for early ballots up to 11 days before Election Day, the EV33 file includes returned early ballots up to the Monday before Election Day, according to the AP.
County officials said that the auditors suffered “a lack of election knowledge & a wealth of political bias.”
In a statement sent to PolitiFact Texas, a Texas GOP spokesperson blamed Democrats for “attempting to overturn election code nationwide.”
“If the press and Democrats don’t like the fact that 74,000 ballots have either major clerical errors or potential fraudulent backgrounds, they should be asking the Arizona Audit Chief for more information,” spokesperson Luke Twombly said. “The Texas GOP has always been committed to election integrity and full transparency. It has only been Democrats who have attempted to overturn election code nationwide and muddy the waters of an election that raised red flags across multiple states.”
An audit performed by the election officials earlier this month found 182 clear cases of voter fraud out of more than 3 million ballots cast in last year’s presidential election, according to the Associated Press. Each of the 182 cases were referred to investigators and so far four cases have led to charges.
President Joe Biden won the state by about 10,000 votes during the general election.
PolitiFact is a fact-checking project to help you sort out fact from fiction in politics. Truth-O-Meter ratings are determined by a panel of three editors. The burden of proof is on the speaker, and PolitiFact rates statements based on the information known at the time the statement is made.
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