|
this is how thwy dumb down mainers! When Bangor Daily News reporter Kevin Miller asked him where the evidence was, he explained that it was likely covered up by corrupt Democratic Secretaries of State and Attorneys General.
Perhaps sensing that he better put up or shut up, Webster's next move was to call a press conference and send out a release in which he announced (in all-caps) "TODAY I WILL BE HAND DELIVERING THE NAMES OF 206 INDIVIDUALS THAT MAY HAVE COMMITTED VOTER FRAUD HERE IN MAINE."
Instead what he presented were the names of 206 students in the University of Maine System that were paying out-of-state tuition and had registered to vote in Maine, something that's 100% legal. Residency requirements for in-state tuition are very different than for voting. If a student lives in Maine nine months of the year and considers their college town their place of residence, regardless of where they lived before they started school, then of course they can vote there.
Webster made some more noises about foreigners voting illegally or people voting more than once in the same election but, again, provided no actual evidence.
This press conference and the one that followed from Secretary Summers, where he made a public show of accepting Webster's list and also refused to provide any evidence of fraud, have been the high point of Webster's campaign so far. He garnered scores of uncritical headlines from incurious reporters and succeeded in creating unreasoned fear about Maine's elections.
As Steve Mistler at the Lewiston Sun Journal put it:
"It was still a blow to the veto coalition. By simply tossing out the words "fraud" and "voters," Summers and Webster had commanded the news cycle for a week.
It didn't matter that they didn't, or couldn't, connect those words to same-day voter registration. The absence of that key link is only important to those engaged in the debate, not those who scan a headline or overhear a newscast."
Webster also succeeded in distracting attention away from his original claims. Gone were his stories about buses full of Job Corps members illegally voting in swing races all over the state. Now the conspiracy had dwindled to a handful of college students who were probably acting completely within the law, and no one seemed to notice.
At this point, some of Webster's fellow Republicans began to turn against him. Activist and columnist Matt Gagnon called the fraud claims "self-righteous grandstanding" and wrote in the Bangor Daily News that "it isn't some kind of epidemic that is de-legitimizing the system, and the specific claims made by the GOP have little to do with same-day registration anyway." (He had similarly dismissive things to say about claims of voter suppression under the new law.)
Kevin Price, an outspoken Republican and a college student who had helped several students on Webster's list register to vote (as Republicans), wrote a blog post panning Webster's claims and bemoaning what he saw as misplaced priorities.
"Instead of attempting to provide coverage for what was a terrible piece of legislation and hinder the signature drive to place the issue on the ballot, he should focus on issues that will actually benefit Maine and help Republicans keep the majority," wrote Price.
Most of Maine's daily newspapers also editorialized against Webster's dog-and-pony show and in favor of election day registration.
more to come!
|