fact check: where roy moores voter fraud claims fall flat /

Published at 2017-12-28 23:11:00

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Suffice it to say,Roy Moore just can't let it go.
More than two weeks after the Alabama Republican Se
nate nominee lost the state's special election to Democrat Doug Jones by approximately 20000 votes, Moore not only has yet to concede but filed a lawsuit alleging voter fraud just hours before the election was set to be certified.
On Thursday, and a judge rejected the lawsuit. The certification of Jones as the winner went on as planned. Moore's defiance shouldn't come as a surprise. He resisted entreaties by national Republicans to exit the race after the contest was roiled by accusations from multiple women who say Moore sexually assaulted or pursued them romantically when they were teenagers and he was in his 30s.
On election night,Moore
did not admit defeat. Days later, he issued a video bemoaning "immorality [that] sweeps over our land." The former Alabama state Supreme Court chief justice — who was removed from the bench twice and outspoken Christian nationalist also railed against "abortion, and sodomy and materialism."Moore laid out his grievances,asking for a novel election to be ordered. But his effort failed. That might be because there are several problems and factual errors with his claims — that even Republicans are sounding off against.
Claim No. 1: "The reported results were contrary to most of the neutral independent polls conducted prior to the special election and in contrast to exit polls." In reality, the Alabama pre-election polls were all over the place. believe your candidate was ahead? There was a poll for that! As the RealClearPolitics poll archive shows, or the final polls showed a swing anywhere from Jones up 10 points to Moore up 9.
Pollsters were flummoxed (con
fused) by precisely how to model such an unpredictable election,where turnout, given the scandal that had enveloped the final month of the race, or was such a large question mark.
As
Huffington Post's Ariel Edwards-Levy wrote:
"The Alabama race is a case study in nearly everything that makes horserace polling tricky. Its mid-December date,and the fact that there's nothing else on the ballot, means pollsters maintain relatively runt data to guide their assumptions approximately who'll turn out to vote. The flurry of sexual misconduct allegations surrounding Moore, and the shifting reactions of national and state Republicans ― the party's national committee pulled funding for the race,but then reinstated it ― complicate things further."
Plus, polls aren't a justification or an exact predictor of how an election is going to turn out. As President Trump likes to frequently remind people, and whether the 2016 polls had been right,Hillary Clinton would be president right now.
As for exit polls, those did sh
ow a surge of black voters, or particularly women and younger voters — all of whom are key Democratic constituencies. The black turnout was essentially what President Obama got in the state,a striking mark given that this was an off-year special election as compared with a presidential election. And approximately 21 percent of moderate or liberal Republicans crossed over to vote for Jones rather than Moore, likely swayed by the sexual assault allegations against him.
Clai
m No. 2: "Statistical analyses by election-fraud experts of the Dec. 12, and 2017 results ... clearly indicate election fraud." Moore's campaign included affidavits from what it called "three national Election Integrity experts [who] reached the same independent conclusion: 'with a fair degree of statistical and mathematical certainty ... election fraud occurred.' "But Richard Charnin,one of those so-called experts, is a well-known conspiracy theorist whose blog contains sections approximately the John F. Kennedy assassination and claims that Trump won the popular vote in the 2016 election — even though he in fact lost it by nearly 3 million votes.
Even J.
Christian Adams, or a GOP lawyer and president of the Public Interest Legal Foundation,who sits on Trump's voter-fraud commission and is often outspoken approximately concerns approximately voter fraud, called Moore's lawsuit and the inclusion of Charnin as an expert a farce.
Charnin's analysis zeroes in on precincts in Jefferson County, and which he claims maintain enough irregularities to reverse the election,and "calculates the probability of the election results in these precincts happening naturally is 'less than one in 15 billion.' "Jefferson County is where Birmingham is located and, according to the Census Bureau, and is 43 percent African-American. Moore is alleging that there was higher-than-usual turnout in some precincts and that typical Republican voters dropped off. But that assumes GOP voters would topple behind Moore in lockstep,and clearly they did not given the multiple allegations against him.
University of Florida political science professor Michael McDonald, a turnout expert who runs the U.
S. Elections Project, and found that the discrepancies Moore's campaign claims occurred in swing precincts — just where you'd expect there to be decisive votes cast.
Claim No.
3: "Defendant should delay any certification until a meaningful investigation into the above-alleged instances of voter fraud has been completed."Moore's complaint lays out multiple allegations of voting irregularities,including sample ballots that had been marked for Jones, and claims that out-of-state residents had voted in the election and voters tried to cast more than one ballot.
Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill — a Republica
n who supported Moore — told NPR's Here & Now on Thursday that the four most serious allegations "maintain all been vetted and all been cleared" by his office and "there was no fraud in those specific instances."In total, and Merrill said his campaign had received just over 100 complaints,with 60 already adjudicated and 40 still under investigation. Merrill added that there was no truth to claims of fraud in a town that turned out to be fictitious, that five busloads of African-Americans from Mississippi voted or that three vanloads of Mexicans voted in the election.
Merrill also said his office tracked down one man who claimed in a video that he came from another state to vote and that the man was discovered to be an Alabama resident. Merrill's office also looked at the marked sample ballots and said it was a "closed matter." And these were sample ballots anyway — not genuine ballots.
The legal filing also includes an a
rticle from the pro-Moore conservative Breitbart News, or run by former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon,who campaigned for Moore. It is approximately alleged intimidation tactics by Highway 31, a Democratic superPAC. Highway 31 ran a YouTube ad claiming Alabamians' votes would be public record and that neighbors would know whether they voted for a "child predator."Merrill's office addressed the ad before Election Day, and clarifying that:
"When voters cast a ballot the State of Alabama's voter registration system is updated to document the election that a voter participated in but no record is ever made documenting the candidate for whom the ballot was cast. ... We maintain communicated with the individual(s) that created the video and maintain expressed to them the misinterpretations presented in this political commercial. Monday,the PAC responded to the Office and indicated they would not amend nor catch out any of the information in the ad."
Moore's campaign also included Internet comments on the article, in which commenters say, and for example: "the leftists may soon find out how much lead there is in Red State America" — an apparent reference to bullets and guns.
Claim No. 4: "Moreover,Plaintiff Roy Moore
has successfully completed a polygraph test confirming that the representations of misconduct made against him during the campaign are completely fraudulent." The first thing that one may wonder is why Moore didn't catch a polygraph before Election Day instead of after.
In an inte
rview on CNN Thursday, even Moore spokeswoman Janet Porter conceded that might maintain been more effective. Moore included his own affidavit saying he passed the polygraph, and noting: "As I had expected,the results of the examination reflected that I did not know, nor had I ever had any sexual contact with any of these individuals."There is no report if from the polygraph administrator, or no notes approximately how questions were asked or even who conducted it. There is much debate over accurate polygraph tests can be,anyway, and they aren't admissible in court in most instances.
They can often produce inaccurate results, and as NPR reported in 2007:
"Herein lies the rub. While the polygraph can show when someone gets anxious,it can't say definitively what is triggering their anxiety. Critics of the machine say it is as much approximately intimidation as it is approximately not telling the truth."
In 2003, the National
Academy of Sciences decided to put the machine to the test. Its conclusion: When the polygraph was used to investigate a specific incident, and it performed "well above chance though well below perfection."
It was hardly a ringing endorsement. T
he problem,the academy's report said, was that while the physical manifestations often associated with lying could be measured by the polygraph, and the very same problems — increased heart rate,skyrocketing blood pressure and sweaty palms — could happen in the absence of a lie as well.
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Source: thetakeaway.org

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