Electoral fraud

It's more than just loyalty to the Republican Party, experts say. A "parallel culture" and prophecies play into evangelicals' not accepting Joe Biden's win.
The attorney general's belated announcement about the lack of evidence of fraud may finally push some elected Republicans to concede to reality.
His comments come despite President Donald Trump's repeated claims that the election was stolen.
Lawyers' baseless arguments of voter fraud "get shredded in any courtroom they’re dumb enough to step into," John Fetterman snapped.
"Thought this pic was photoshopped, but nope, just hilariously symbolic!" one Twitter user commented on the president's tiny desk that became a meme.
Reuters White House correspondent Jeff Mason pushed back on Trump's election fraud claims, prompting an outburst.
The unexpected pivot comes as the attorney continues to make increasingly outrageous and baseless claims of voter fraud in the 2020 election.
Trump and his campaign have waged a war on the election system, relying heavily on baseless allegations of fraud in cities with large Black and brown communities.
The conservative magazine condemned the baseless lawsuits and conspiracies of the Trump legal team as a "profoundly undemocratic gambit."
President Donald Trump is "openly seeking to disenfranchise Black voters," citing baseless claims of election fraud, the lawsuit argues.