âLike a Wild Westâ: One Manâs Journey Into the Heart of Americaâs Voting Industry | Ben Wofford/Politico
When President Donald Trump began spreading the conspiracy theories about why Joe Biden beat him in Novemberâs election, he swung at all the glitzy targets: The media, Democrats, China. But he saved his most spectacular accusations for a more obscure and implausible target: The companies that make Americaâs voting machines. Over the winter, Trump publicly harangued Dominion Voting, a small company with a headquarters in Denver, and another company called Smartmatic, which barely has a footprint in the United States. Week after week, Trumpâs lawyers cast them as the hub of a grandiose conspiracy to alter the vote, one machine at a time. The wonky set of experts and academics who actually study U.S. voting infrastructure watched in shock. It was obvious the Big Lie about the election was patently absurd. And when it came to voting machines, it was also ironic: Precisely thanks to the serious efforts of Trumpâs own Department of Homeland Security, the 2020 contest was, at least technologically speaking, the most secure election in modern history. Yet these experts also understood that voting companies were an easy mark for a reason. By just about any measure, they are some of the murkiest and inscrutable firms in the civilian private sector. … In March, Caulfieldâs study on prices was published by Verified Voting. In various corners of the election world, the analysis was instantly hailed as a breakthrough. âThis information, on this scale, hasnât been widely available to anyone,â says Lindeman, Verified Votingâs co-director. âUntil this report was provided, no one really knew much at all.â
âLike a Wild Westâ: One Manâs Journey Into the Heart of Americaâs Voting Industry – POLITICO
