Election 2020 denier Cleta Mitchell is back
In the days after the 2020 election, Ms. Mitchell was among a cadre of Republican lawyers who frantically compiled unsubstantiated accusations, debunked claims and an array of confusing and inconclusive eyewitness reports to build the case that the election was marred by fraud. Courts rejected the cases and election officials were unconvinced, thwarting a stunning assault on the transfer of power.
Now Ms. Mitchell is prepping for the next election. Working with a well-funded network of organizations on the right, including the Republican National Committee, she is recruiting election conspiracists into an organized cavalry of activists monitoring elections.
In seminars around the country, Ms. Mitchell is marshaling volunteers to stake out election offices, file information requests, monitor voting, work at polling places and keep detailed records of their work. She has tapped into a network of grass-root groups that promote misinformation and espouse wild theories about the 2020 election, including the fiction that President Bidens victory could still be decertified and Mr. Trump reinstated.
One concern is the groups intent to research the backgrounds of local and state officials to determine whether each is a friend or foe of the movement. Many officials already feel under attack by those who falsely contend that the 2020 election was stolen.
Some former election officials say they are hopeful that when election skeptics observe the process they may finally be convinced that the system is sound. But several who examined Ms. Mitchells training materials and statements at the request of The New York Times sounded alarms about her tactics.
Ms. Mitchells trainings promote particularly aggressive methods with a focus on surveillance that appear intended to feed on activists distrust and create pressure on local officials, rather than ensure voters access to the ballot, they say. A test drive of the strategy in the Virginia governors race last year highlighted how quickly the work when conducted by people convinced of falsehoods about fraud can disrupt the process and spiral into bogus claims, even in a race Republicans won.