Anyone who pays attention to the right-wing noise machine could tell you what the Feds are likely to say about California. But Devlin Barrett of The New York Times, like most mainstream media journalists, appears to have no idea what the right is alleging. He seems baffled by the Justice Department's promises of future indictments, and appears much more concerned with how the Trump Justice Department is violating pre-Trump norms.
Speaking to a conservative radio host on Monday, the top federal prosecutor in Los Angeles made an unusually pointed prediction that cast doubt on the results of California’s primary races, even as votes were still being counted.Barrett quotes an expert who assumes that Essayli and the Justice Department have got nothing:
“We will be charging some people,” the prosecutor, Bill Essayli, told the host, Glenn Beck, delivering a promise that would most likely have been considered a violation of Justice Department policy under decades of past practice. “It will be election fraud charges in the next — I hate to put timelines on things — one or two months I believe. We need some of these results to be certified so we can prove some of the allegations.”
The administration is “throwing everything against the wall that they can find, and nothing is sticking,” said David Becker, a former voting rights lawyer at the Justice Department who is now the executive director of the Center for Election Innovation and Research.But I think I know what Essayli has in mind, and Barrett should know, too, because it's right there in the New York Post.
“Almost all of their work is going back over conspiracy theorists’ allegations that were debunked five years ago,” he added. “They are running out of tools in their toolbox.”
First, there was this Post story, on Tuesday morning.
Thousands of homeless voters were registered to vote at LA shelters — despite many not living there or the facilities not having any beds.As far as I can tell, California registers homeless people at shelters because it believes homeless people are citizens who deserve the right to vote just like the rest of us, and because if they're going to be registered, they need to be registered at some address. I understand why critics of this policy might believe it's ripe for abuse, but the potential for abuse is not proof of abuse. Also, it's appropriate for city council members to try to obtain funding for social service providers.
And as Spencer Pratt was eliminated by Nithya Raman in the mayor’s race on Monday night, it can be revealed that one drop-in center that received $600,000 from the socialist candidate had 185 registered voters at the address but offers no accommodations.
The revelations have prompted US Attorney Bill Essayli to say he will investigate the concerns uncovered by The Post and “follow the evidence” to see if the law has been broken.
A review of records shows 7,600 voters tied to homeless shelters and service providers.
And as for that suspicious-seeming "7,600 voters," I'll remind you that Raman now leads Pratt by nearly 30,000 votes.
But there's more. On Tuesday evening, the Post reported this:
A series of shocking videos show homeless residents on Los Angeles’ Skid Row claiming they were paid to vote for Mayor Karen Bass and councilwoman Nithya Raman....The clips were posted by a TikTok account called laneedsspencerpratt. They were also promoted on Twitter:
The footage, recorded near 7th Street and Flower Street in downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday morning, has since been provided to the Department of Justice.
The video on X shared by @WallStreetApes has amassed nearly 700,000 views with over 1,000 comments from users.(In April, Nate Silver reported that Wall Street Apes was the Twitter account with the ninth-highest engagement rate.)
The Post produced a convenient supercut:
This story apparently proved so popular that a follow-up appeared yesterday in the Post:
Homeless people living on LA’s Skid Row claimed they’d been told to sign multiple registration forms, forge signatures and offered cash to fill out voter information by people working for “political partners.”TheVoiceofLA actually appears to be a Spencer Pratt fan account, for what it's worth.
A series of videos published Thursday by TheVoiceofLA, an Instagram account known for interviews on Skid Row — the center of Los Angeles’ largest homeless community — laid out the shocking allegations.
How plausible are these claims? Not very:
The first woman claims she's asked to fill out and sign multiple ballots, but she doesn't seem to know what story she's supposed to tell.
INTERVIEWER: So, and they get you to vote for the same person.What does that even mean?
HOMELESS WOMAN #1: No, they want us to vote for whatever the ballot is.
The second woman makes even less sense:
INTERVIEWER: ... you get "Sign these petitions, sign this ballot."She might be describing the tactics of people circulating petitions to get initiatives on the ballot, but she certainly doesn't seem to be describing anything to do with the mayoral election.
HOMELESS WOMAN #2: Yeah. Do this. And I've been, I've been propositioned with bank fraud, phone fraud, voter fraud, um, PayPal fraud, you name it. They've came at me every [bleep]ing which way down here. There ain't no end to the fraud down here.
Maybe all these people are telling the truth. Maybe they've been paid to vote. Or perhaps they've been paid to say they've been paid to vote.
*****
I've believed for many years that the manistream media should look at stories like this that spread virally on the right and take them seriously -- seriously, but skeptically. Over and over again, right-wingers have concocted pseudo-scandals that were ignored by the mainstream press. ACORN. The so-called Ground Zero mosque. "Weaponization" of the IRS against right-wing non-profits. Right-wingers get worked up while the mainstream media looks the other way, which means that all the coverage of these stories has a right-wing bias. By the time the mainstream press wakes up and weighs in, much of the country believes the right-wing/GOP version of events, even if the truth doesn't match the GOP narrative.
I think non-right-wing journalists should look into this series of claims. Is there any evidence that the registrations mentioned in the first Post story are illegal or fraudulent? Is there any evidence that these people who claim to have been paid to vote actually were?
If, as I suspect, the claims are false, that's a story: the right is spreading fraudulent claims of fraud.
Yes, I know: the mainstream press might assume that agents of the Republican Party like the New York Post are operating in good faith. There's a risk that mainstream journalists will fall for the fake news.
But I'm imagining a better world, a world where the press is on to the GOP's bullshit, and catches Republicans in the act of spreading falsehoods before those falsehoods become a narrative even middle-of-the-road voters believe -- especially now, when the federal government wants to put political enemies in prison based on right-wing narratives alone.