BSS
  04 Mar 2024, 14:55
Update : 04 Mar 2024, 15:01

Conspiracy theories gain new life as US campaign unfolds

REDDING, United States, March 4, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - In this week's "Super

Tuesday" primaries, security guards will monitor the back door at one Shasta
County polling precinct -- a sign of the high political tensions in rural
northern California.

Two years ago, angry men burst into the precinct to contest the results of a
local election, their anger fueled by conspiracy theories surrounding
electronic vote-counting systems.

"This is an attack on the process... It's hard sometimes, and it's
discouraging," says Joanna Francescut, assistant county clerk and registrar
of voters.

This rural northern California area mirrors the forces fracturing America
ever since Donald Trump falsely asserted that the 2020 election was stolen
from him.

In poll after poll, a majority of Republican voters across the country
continue to regard Joe Biden as an illegitimate president.

In historically conservative Shasta County, Trump soundly defeated Biden,
garnering 65 percent of the vote. But last year, newly elected Republicans
sought to bar the use of Dominion Voting Systems machines, the focus of
numerous debunked conspiracy theories.

Supporters of the Trumpist lie, the officials also invited conspiracy
theorists from all over the country to expound their theories at public
meetings.

Suspicions run deep among residents of Redding, the county seat. Many firmly
believe in "computer manipulation" and describe the Dominion vote-counting
machines as "black boxes" that can be manipulated in secret.

"Donald Trump won despite the cheating against him here in Shasta County,"
says Laura Hobbs, a stay-at-home mom.

- To count manually or not -

Rulings by some 50 US courts that dismissed charges of electoral fraud carry
no weight with such voters. Nor does the settlement last year in which Fox
News agreed to pay Dominion $787.5 million over its airing of the false
allegations, a move to avert a trial on defamation charges.

Faced with a backlash, election officials in Shasta County scrapped the
Dominion machines, vowing to count all votes by hand. That set off a showdown
with the Democratically controlled state legislature, which enacted a law
that narrowly limits hand counting of ballots to races with fewer than 1,000
eligible registered voters.

Doubts about electoral processes are spreading throughout the United States:
A rural county in Arizona also recently tried to ditch its voting machines.

Francescut is dismayed by this defiance: her team already manually counts a
small proportion of the ballots at each election, to check that the machines
are working correctly, in accordance with law.

"It's key to do both," she tells AFP. "You can't rely just on machines. You
can't rely just on hand count."

After the showdown, Shasta County authorities bought new machines, produced
by another company.

Local Republicans are denouncing an "overreach" by the state legislature, and
are considering further recourse.

"The cheating is continuing and it's putting a cloud over the March 5
primary," says County Supervisor Patrick Jones.

"We are going to not stop until we have fair elections."

- Fear of violence -

In Redding, many residents expect Trump to crush his rival Nikki Haley on
Tuesday.

But local races unleash hotter passions than the national election. The
central question is: will the anti-machine Trumpists hold onto power?

Jones, a gunsmith who wears a pistol strapped to his ankle at all times,
already threatens to deny any outcome other than his team's re-election --
just like Trump did after his 2020 election loss.

"I believe that cheating is occurring right now," Jones says. "If we
determine that there has been fraud within our elections... I will not be
able to certify any fraudulent results."

Rancher Mary Rickert has trouble recognizing the area where she's been
raising cows for five decades.

At 71, she is one of the few Republican elected county supervisors to oppose
the project to abandon vote-counting machines -- which has earned her the
opprobrium of Trumpists.

"If they do not maintain their board positions... there's going to be a huge
amount of turmoil," Rickert frets, noting that a local militia operates in
the county, which issues a large number of gun permits. "We might even need
the National Guard."

Rickert voted for Trump twice, but swears she'll never do so again. A not
insignificant sector of the Republican Party shares her views, and their
actions may have a decisive impact on the November presidential election.

"We're going to be a very fractured party moving forward and I don't think
we're going to be very effective," she says.