CALIFORNIA FOCUS
1720 OAK STREET, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA 90405
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2018 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
1720 OAK STREET, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA 90405
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2018 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“STATE’S ELECTION BOSS BEATS TRUMP ON VOTING PANEL”
It’s not often that an obscure state official manages to lay
a serious defeat on the President of the United States. But that’s what Alex
Padilla pulled off early this year, and he did it without any gloating.
Padilla’s victory came when President Trump just after New
Year’s celebrations ended announced the dissolution of his controversial anti-voter
fraud panel, which had become mired in multiple lawsuits and resistance from
many states.
The resistance was led from the get-go by Padilla,
California’s secretary of state and top election official. When a federal
commission demands copious information from every state and the most populous
state refuses to provide any, it’s difficult to see how that commission can
succeed. When more than 20 other states follow this lead, the commission’s task
gets even harder.
So from the moment Padilla declared he wouldn’t cooperate, the
Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity, nominally chaired by
Vice President Mike Pence and actually led by Kansas Secretary of State Kris
Kobach, seemed doomed to irrelevancy at best.
To understand all this, it’s necessary to think back to
Election Night 2016, when Trump won the Electoral College but lost the popular
vote by more than 3.1 million. He lost California by more than that, meaning
this state caused the popular vote defeat Trump has been denying ever since.
His denials often take the form of allegations of
widespread voter fraud, which he claimed on Election Night were especially
egregious in California. Of course, neither he nor his staff nor his commission
ever produced any evidence for this.
The fraud charge insulted Padilla, who insists California
elections are clean. No investigation of alleged vote fraud in this state – not
even one conducted in the late 1990s by a Republican-controlled Congress – ever
found more than a minuscule number of violations. In short, the illegal
immigrants Trump believes provided his margin of popular vote defeat have never
been proven to affect the outcome of any election.
But less than a month after assuming office Trump set up the
supposedly bipartisan commission to examine his claims. His administration
without any examples still insists “there is substantial evidence of voter
fraud,” as Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders claimed even while announcing
the commission’s demise.
Padilla probably would have cooperated with this commission
had it conducted a simple investigation on whether illegal immigrants registered
to vote in large numbers or on questions about possible dead persons kept on
voting rolls.
But Kobach went much farther, reminding observers of his
past as a lawyer for the Foundation for American Immigration Reform, a strongly
anti-immigration group. Within a month of the commission’s swearing in, he
demanded from election officials in every state a list of all registered
voters, their birth dates, party identification and voting histories, plus the
last four digits of all voters’ Social Security numbers. So much for the
old-fashioned secret ballot.
So sweeping were Kobach’s demands that, acting as Kansas’
top election official, he refused to turn over Social Security numbers to his
own commission. It was OK to demand them from everyone else, but not from the
constituents he hopes will elect him governor later this year.
Padilla’s immediate reaction, “I will not provide sensitive
voter information to a commission that has already inaccurately passed judgment
that millions of Californians voted illegally.” And that was that. The
commission was an instant dead duck, even if it took months to become official.
Fortunately for voters who could have been at risk for
rampant identity theft, the Kobach group had no subpoena powers.
When its end was announced, Padilla reacted without
gloating. “It’s no surprise,” he said, “that a commission founded on a lie of
widespread voter fraud proved to be a fraud itself…No taxpayer dollars should
have been wasted on (this).”
But Trump still insists he lost the popular vote because of
voter fraud, and it’s all but certain that if he’s not reelected in 2020, he’ll
claim it was also because of that.
But his claims were never more than a flailing denial of
reality, so his defeat by Padilla was inevitable and deserved.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net.
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