Rumors of voter intimidation at the polls, non-citizens voting, and ABC ‘preemptively’ declaring Harris the victor in Pennsylvania

Oct 31, 2024

2024 U.S. ELECTIONS RAPID RESEARCH BLOG

RESEARCH MEMO | OCTOBER 31

This is part of an ongoing series of rapid research blog posts and rapid research analysis about the 2024 U.S. elections from the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public. It was crossposted on the CIP’s election rumor research Substack newsletter.

As we race towards Election Day, we’ll be producing our usual “weekly” rapid research memo twice a week. Each memo captures the emerging rumors we’ve been seeing across social media in recent days. 

This collection highlights novel or viral rumors our researchers have identified using a combination of qualitative, quantitative, digital ethnographic, and visual, methodologies. Some of these rumors have been featured in longer analysis pieces on our Substack newsletter (linked below). Many of these rumors are false, but some may be true or partially true. Often, they are misleading in one of five familiar ways, as we discuss in this analysis.

If you are a journalist, researcher, or election official who would like more information on a particular rumor, or wish to speak to the CIP research team about our ongoing rapid research findings, you can contact us using this Google Form

This Week On Our Substack

A diagram in a spiral showing the relationship of rumors and evidence generation feeding election lawsuits and political mobilization.

Figure 1: A diagram of the iterative process facilitated by evidence generation infrastructure.

We put out longer analysis pieces as well as shorter rapid research blog posts on our Substack. Last week, we published several rapid research items, including: “Unfolding blame game between Left and Right as Pennsylvania announces fraudulent voter registrations in Lancaster County” and a reported analysis exploring “Evidence generation infrastructure in the 2024 election.” We also published a memo earlier this week

Sign up to receive future updates via our Substack or find our election rumor research cross posted on the CIP’s 2024 Rapid Research Blog.


Emergent Rumors

Unfolding blame game between Left and Right as Pennsylvania announces fraudulent voter registrations in Lancaster County

Figure 2: Plot showing the cumulative number of tweets related to the rumor surrounding fraudulent voter registration applications in Lancaster and adjacent counties. Circles are sized by number of followers and colored by tweet type. White labels indicate original tweets and gray labels indicate retweets. The virality spike at the beginning of the graph (indicated by a dotted line) indicates a mix of coverage by mainstream news media and newsbrokering accounts, specifically @BehizyTweets and @DC_Draino. Tweets from newsbrokers were the primary drivers of virality at the beginning of rumoring, with 74,824 retweets and 40,870 retweets, respectively.

Figure 2: Plot showing the cumulative number of tweets related to the rumor surrounding fraudulent voter registration applications in Lancaster and adjacent counties. Circles are sized by number of followers and colored by tweet type. White labels indicate original tweets and gray labels indicate retweets. The virality spike at the beginning of the graph (indicated by a dotted line) indicates a mix of coverage by mainstream news media and newsbrokering accounts, specifically @BehizyTweets and @DC_Draino. Tweets from newsbrokers were the primary drivers of virality at the beginning of rumoring, with 74,824 retweets and 40,870 retweets, respectively.

  • Earlier this week, we published a rapid research note about rumors stemming from reports of confirmed voter registration fraud in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. 
  • On Friday, October 25, Lancaster County released a statement about 2500 voter registrations being investigated for potential fraud. At the time of the press conference, many of the registrations were deemed as confirmed cases of fraud. The actors involved and motivations are still unknown. This was reported on October 22 by the election clerk’s office to the District Attorney, and a press conference was held later that day on October 25.
  • Rumoring has occurred within both left- and right-leaning communities online. On the political right, several prominent accounts used video clips of the press conference to challenge the prevailing narrative from experts (and many Democrats) that widespread voter registration fraud isn’t real. 
  • This framing is misleading in two familiar ways: (1) it ignores that this attempted fraud has a remedy — it was discovered and therefore will not impact results, and (2) it exaggerates the extent or impact of one evidence, to suggest without evidence that it is representative of larger trends. Contrary to this case supporting the idea that fraud is widespread, it reinforces the fact that elections are secure. 
  • Among left-leaning communities, a narrative has emerged directly targeting Scott Presler, a right-leaning influencer and activist, by speculating without evidence that he might be behind the Lancaster County fraud. Presler’s high-profile Republican National Committee-backed “get out the vote” efforts and his vocal focus on registering Republican voters in Luzerne and Lancaster counties, particularly among the Amish population, have been brought into the conversation.
  • Figure 2 visualizes the spread of these rumors across time. It illustrates how on X, mainstream media reporting on the fraud occurred simultaneously to newsbrokering from @BehizyTweets and @DC_Draino, both conservative influencers on X. Early attention appears to have been driven by both media and newsbrokers, although engagement on X was primarily driven by the newsbrokers, who received 74,824 retweets and 40,870 retweets, respectively. 
  • Over the following days, other influencers and elites continued to amplify the event. This included conservative activist Scott Presler and Donald Trump, who misleadingly exaggerated the extent of the discovered fraudulent voter registrations by suggesting that similar fraud was happening in other Pennsylvania counties where no fraud has been reported. 

Rumors of voter intimidation and accusations of voter suppression in Bucks County, Pennsylvania

Viral X post claims a Canadian voted in the U.S. election

Alabama Secretary of State claims to have evidence that Biden is registering non-citizen voters

  • Posters on X shared video clips of the Alabama Secretary of State Wes Allen claiming that he has evidence that the Biden administration is providing voter registration forms to non-citizens. The clip, taken from Newsmax, argues that a Biden policy “mandates that noncitizens receive information regarding registering to vote in Alabama and registration forms required to register.” 
  • Allen repeated the claims on the state’s official website. In the press release, Allen points to federal policies that mandate that “anyone who comes into contact with certain state agencies be provided with voter registration information.” Allen has regularly repeated the claim over the past several months. Allen’s claim is accurate, but misleading. The National Voter Registration Act requires states to offer voter registration opportunities at motor vehicle agencies and several other government offices, such as Armed Forces recruitment offices and offices providing public assistance for people with disabilities. These opportunities are intended to make it easier for citizens to register to vote. When applying for voter registration, applicants must attest to their citizenship.
  • The Act also outlines procedures for voter roll maintenance to ensure records are accurate and current, which includes a provision that prohibits  states from removing people from their rolls 90 days ahead of a federal election. Allen had tried to remove alleged non-citizens, many of whom he acknowledged were actually naturalized U.S. citizens, after the 90 day deadline, prompting a federal court to block his move. There is no evidence that non-citizens are voting in Alabama.   

False claims of non-citizens cutting in line and voting in Pennsylvania 

Rumors swirl around Trump’s “secret plan” to overturn election results with Mike Johnson

  • A popular TikTok account shared clips of a recent Trump rally where Trump claimed to have a “secret” that means that “they are going to do really well with the House.” The video overlays a screenshot of an X post claiming that Trump plans to “sow enough doubt about the election results in key states so that the House can declare a contingent election and proclaim Trump the victor.”
  • Similar sentiments were shared on Bluesky and Threads — with users sharing a clip from CNN in which U.S. Rep. Dan Goldman makes similar claims about the use of the House to overturn election results.
  • There are a few and extremely rare mechanisms that could potentially give Congress more power over the certification of the Presidential race. For more details, see this analysis from the Constitutional Accountability Center. 

New York voter turned away based on a false “90-day rule” about registrations 

  • Rumors shared on X and TikTok claim that a voter was told by a poll worker that they could not vote since their registration was updated less than 90 days ago. 
  • The original poster on X also posted as a follow-up that they called the Election Protection hotline and were informed that there is, in fact, no 90-day rule that would make them ineligible. The poll worker gave them wrong information, something that several users also said. 
  • Users sharing the story on TikTok shared the story as an example of “voter intimidation from poll workers,” though there is not yet evidence that the poll worker did this intentionally. 
  • We did not find a statement from New York officials regarding this claim. 

Odds and Ends


Viral TikTok Trends and Rumors

Our research team has developed a qualitative research method designed to surface election administration-related content tailored to different community, identity and interest groups. The following is a collection of videos and trends our researchers have captured in the past week. 

 

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