Five things to know about Trump's election fraud allegations
SPY•California vote-counting delays drew fresh suspicions
Suspicions overshadow California's vote count
Trump equated the slow pace of vote-counting in the closely watched races for California governor and Los Angeles mayor last month to fraud and questioned the handling of mail-in ballots. The results were officially certified last week, more than a month after primaries were held.
California’s vote count is famously slow in part because 80-90% of its 23 million voters vote by mail. While Trump and some of his allies have claimed the pace of votes showed the election was being manipulated, they have not publicly produced any evidence of fraud. Trump-endorsed Republican candidate Steve Hilton finished second in the voting in the governor’s race and advanced to the November general election.
Attorney General Rob Bonta disputed voter fraud claims, telling NPR “every count, recount, hand count, court case and audit has shown time and time again — not just in California, but throughout this country — that there is no widespread voter fraud.”




