There’s no evidence of widespread voter fraud in the United States, according to numerous investigations and studies.
— NBC Politics (@NBCPolitics) May 27, 2020
The president’s own voter fraud investigatory committee disbanded without producing evidence of any systemic issues. https://t.co/MSMys1f31R
Analysis: A review of Trump’s many unsubstantiated allegations of voter fraud https://t.co/8v7gog4ZFx
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) May 27, 2020
Twitter added a fact-check to Trumps unsubstantiated and unfounded claims about voter fraud.
— Nick Corasaniti (@NYTnickc) May 26, 2020
The link brings users to a "Moments" page with a link to a Politico article and a Twitter written summary of the fact check: https://t.co/I8sVVcI9tJ pic.twitter.com/MsKtE5TjTj
When any one says “voter fraud” think “distraction” from real problems require real leadership: “Chris Wallace debunks Trump: No record of massive or serious fraud from mail-in voting” https://t.co/eCj1pcaR8T
— Maya Wiley (@mayawiley) May 22, 2020
A Trump election conspiracy theory fell apart Wednesday when Florida’s law enforcement agency said it had found no widespread voter fraud in the 2018 races for Senate and governor https://t.co/CLdqmaX4Dp
— POLITICO (@politico) May 22, 2020
"absentee ballot fraud is very rare — there were 491 prosecutions related to absentee ballots in all elections nationwide between 2000 and 2012, out of literally billions of ballots cast" @rickhasen always has the receipts https://t.co/3HXXpvU9qB
— Emily Bazelon (@emilybazelon) May 21, 2020
No lie is too brazen for Trump. The only evidence of Democratic “voter fraud” he’s been able to cite is a pants on fire lie https://t.co/VHNbCfjixp pic.twitter.com/mSU7YtSnNh
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) May 17, 2020
Mine @Slate with @Dahlialithwick: The right-wing network spawned by Federalist Society has gone full Trumpian, morphing from group of principled conservatives into secretly-funded cabal spouting conspiracy theories such as myth of widespread voter fraud https://t.co/yqkpTntK9w
— Rick Hasen (@rickhasen) May 28, 2020
You might remember in 2017, Trump cited being registered in two states as evidence of voter fraud.
— andrew kaczynski🤔 (@KFILE) May 27, 2020
We then found out several cabinet and top officials were registered to vote in two states.https://t.co/WUFHvNwyiF