One-term President Trump’s campaign plans to buy ads on unspecified cable television networks to promote his effort to overturn the election he lost, highlighting claims that have been refuted by elections officials and dismissed by judges across the country.
The ad is so complete with untruths that YouTube has banned both of them.
One commercial claims that mail-in ballots were “a recipe for fraud” and urges viewers to “contact your legislators today.”
Trump has sought to persuade Republican state lawmakers in several battleground states to override voters and award him their states’ Electoral College votes.
Trump and the Republican Party have raised about $208 million since the election.
One ad shows footage of ballots being pulled from under a table at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, where ballots were counted as a narrator decries “suitcases of ballots added in secret in Georgia.”
But Gabriel Sterling, Georgia’s Republican election system manager, has said the “suitcases” were standard ballot-handling boxes and that the video was innocent.
The entire video shows election workers had been preparing to go home and had packed up uncounted ballots for the night, before being told they had to stay and keep counting, Sterling has said.
The commercial also highlights “poll watchers denied access in Pennsylvania,” part of the Trump campaign’s complaint that Republican observers weren’t allowed to monitor the counting of mail-in ballots in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
Yet Republicans never provided evidence of actual fraud that would justify invalidating legally cast votes, just complaints that observers were kept too far away.
While observers were kept behind barriers at a distance in Philadelphia, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that the state’s elections code doesn’t specify how close they are allowed and that county officials have discretion in setting the limit.
Trump and his allies have failed in courts across the country to convince judges that their claims of a fraudulent election have merit.
Attorney General William Barr has said the Department of Justice hasn’t seen evidence of widespread fraud in the election.
The Department of Homeland Security reported this was the ‘most secure’ election in history.
On Friday night, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a bid by Texas and Trump to nullify the election results in four pivotal states.