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Republicans confirm Trump’s 2020 election was “Lost, Not Stolen”

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Numerous Republican-led audits, in-depth investigations and testimonies have proven that no voter fraud or machine rigging occurred in the 2020 presidential election. Even former president Donald Trump admitted – in 2020 and 2024 – he lost the election.

Trusting the 2024 election process is vitally important. Knowing the reality of the 2020 election, truth telling by Trump and GOP-spearheaded fact-finding should erase voters’ concern about the integrity of the upcoming election.

First, recall Cassidy Hutchinson (GOP assistant to Mark Meadows, Trump’s chief of staff) testified before the Jan. 6 House Select Committee that Trump told Meadows and other White House staff that he lost the 2020 election (The Hill, Sept. 12, 2023). Hutchinson’s testimony has never been refuted.

Second, on Aug. 4, Trump -- in an interview with Lex Fridman (podcast #442) – admitted he lost the 2020 election (The Economic Times, Sept. 6). Trump also said he “lost the 2020 election” on two other occasions: Aug. 23, at an event near the Southern border, and on Aug. 30, at the Moms for Liberty summit (USA Today, Sept. 8).

Third, the 2020 election deniers, Trump and J.D. Vance may purposely be ignoring that eight prominent, life-long Republicans, all attorneys, published a 72-page research-based document (Lost, Not Stolen) concluding that Joe Biden won the election fair and square. All voters should read, at a bare minimum, the introduction (pp. 1-2) and executive summary (pp. 3-4) of Lost, Not Stolen, accessible at https://lostnotstolen.org.

Fourth, Ken Block, a data analytics expert and Trump campaign consultant, was hired by Trump to find voter fraud in the 2020 election. In a deposition taken by the Jan. 6 committee, he stated there were no voter irregularities anywhere in America (USA Today, Jan. 2).

Fifth, when white nationalist, supremacist and antisemetic Nick Fuentes – Trump’s guest at a Nov. 22, 2022 Mar-a-Lago dinner – learned that Trump admitted he lost in 2020, he blasted Trump on his Sept. 6 podcast requesting voters to not back Trump. An infuriated Fuentes stated “So, why did we do Stop the Steal?” (USA Today, Sept. 5 & 8).

Sixth, Trump’s chief pollster Tony Fabrizio presented a 27-page election defeat autopsy report in Dec. of 2020 to Trump and his advisors saying Trump saw “the greatest erosion with white voters, particular white men” plus his honesty and trustworthiness were a problem (Politico, Feb. 2, 2021).

Lost, Not Stolen

Eight die-hard Republican attorneys conducted a legal review of all 64 court cases filed by Trump and his supporters to contest the 2020 results. The final report, with 280 reference citations and published in July 2021, provided unequivocal evidence that Trump lost. They found there was “no credible evidence that fraud changed the outcome even in a single precinct, let alone in any state” (Cato Institute, July 21, 2022).

The eight GOP attorneys-at-law “also examined, point by point, every fraud accusation made in social media and in the public forum by those who claimed the election was stolen.” They found no improper vote counts, no voting machine rigging, no absentee ballot fraud, no voter identification fraud and no blocking of observers during the vote count (Trib Total Media, July 16, 2022).

Lost, Not Stolen’s authors, who remain Republicans, include three prominent retired federal judges (Thomas Griffith, Michael McConnell and J. Michael Luttig), former solicitor general Theodore Olson, election lawyer Benjamin Ginsberg, longtime congressional staff chief David D. Hoppe and former senators John Danforth (1976-1995, Mo.) and Gordon Smith (1997-2009, Ore.).

The eight GOP lawyers went on in their 72-page definitive report to “urge fellow conservatives to cease obsessing over the results of the 2020 election.”

It’s interesting that 81 percent of adults surveyed in an ABC News/Ispos poll will accept the results of our upcoming Nov. 5 election. This means 19 percent of Americans -- the ill-informed and gullible -- have accepted Trump and GOP officials’ Stop the Steal pretense. Furthermore, 67 percent of Americans feel Trump isn’t prepared to accept the outcome unless he wins (Aug. 30).

Patriotic Americans feel sad for the 2020 election deniers, who have been duped, hoodwinked, led down a dark rabbit hole and given disinformation, misinformation and blatant propaganda. Trump’s 2020 stolen election conspiracy theory – one of 51 attributed to Trump and touted 526 times on his Truth Social media platform -- has been proven, beyond a shadow of doubt, to be fallacious (CREW, June 27).

You should feel confident and comfortable voting on Nov. 5. Why? Close and contested elections are a part of American history. All states have voting security upgrade processes in place – robust and resilient -- to handle just such situations.

Trusted elections are the foundation of our democracy. On Nov. 5, don’t fret. Vote!

 

Op-ed reference sources:

  1. John Danforth, Benjamin Ginsberg, Thomas B. Griffith, David D. Hoppe, J. Michael Luttig, Michael W. McConnell, Theodore B. Olson and Gordon H. Smith, Lost, Not Stolen, July, 2021, https://lostnotstolen.org

  2. (U.S. News report) Finally Donald Trump says he lost 2020 U.S. election by a whisker, The Economic Times, Sept. 6, 2024

  3. Sarah Gray and Kelsey Vlamis, Mark Meadows quietly testified that he told Trump the election wasn’t being stolen, report says. But his book still pushed election fraud claims, Business Insider, Oct. 24, 2023

  4. Brad Dress, Trump blames Kanye West for bringing Nick Fuentes as dinner guest, The Hill, Nov. 27, 2022

  5. Sarah D. Wire, Trump admits he lost in 2020, leading white nationalist Nick Fuentes to disavow him, USA Today, Sept. 5 and Sept. 8, 2024

  6. Walter Olson, “Lost, Not Stolen”: Prominent conservatives refute 2020 election myths, Cato Institute, July 21, 2022

  7. Chris Walker, Poll: Two-thirds of Americans think Trump won’t accept 2024 election outcome, Truthout, Aug. 30, 2024

  8. Miles Parks, Driven by Republicans, most Americans are concerned about fraud in the 2024 election, National Public Radio, Oct. 3, 2024

  9. Jennifer Agiesta and Ariel Edwards-Levy, CNN Poll: Percentage of Republicans who think Biden’s 2020 win was illegitimate ticks back up near 70%, CNN Politics, Aug. 3, 2023

  10. Hannah Robbins, Poll suggests Republicans who believe Trump won in 2020 expect significant chaos in November, Hub-Johns Hopkins University, Aug. 7, 2024

  11. Kelsey Dallas, Former federal judge Thomas Griffith talks about contentious 2020 election on `60 Minutes,’ Deseret News, Sept. 16, 2024

  12. Benjamin Ginsberg, Lost, Not Stolen: The conservative case that Trump lost and Biden won the 2020 presidential election, Hoover Institution, July 1, 2022

  13. Ken Block, Trump paid me to find voter fraud. Then he lied after I found 2020 election wasn’t stolen, USA Today, Jan. 2, 2024

  14. Aila Slisco, Republican judges, lawyers conclude 2020 election was `Lost, Not Stolen,’ Newsweek, July 14, 2022

  15. Joseph Sabino Mistick, Facts on a lost, not stolen, election, Trib Total Media, July 16, 2022

  16. Miles Park, Driven by Republicans, most Americans are concerned about voter fraud in the 2024 election, WNIN-National Public Radio, Oct. 3, 2024

  17. Caitlin Moniz, Donald Trump has spread 2020 election conspiracy theories 500 times on Truth Social, CREW-Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, June 27, 2024

  18. (report) List of conspiracy theories promoted by Donald Trump, Wikipedia, Oct. 17, 2024

  19. Alex Isenbstadt, Trump pollster’s campaign autopsy paints damning picture of defeat, Politico, Feb. 1, 2021

  20. Cassidy Hutchinson, Enough, Simon and Schuster, Sept. 26, 2023

Contact information: Steven.B.Corbin@gmail.com; 319-290-9779; Apr. 1-Oct. 31: 4116 Maryhill Drive, Cedar Falls, IA 50613-5781 and Nov. 1-March 31: 55055 Shoal Creek, La Quinta, CA 92253-4728

Disclosures:

  1. Steve is a non-paid freelance opinion editor and guest columnist contributor (circa 2013-present) to 181 news agencies in 39 states who receives no remuneration, funding or endorsement from any for-profit business, not-for-profit organization, political action committee or political party

  2. Steve is Professor Emeritus of Marketing, University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls (1975-2013); Marketing Department Head (17 years); State of Iowa Board of Regents Award for Faculty Excellence in Teaching, Research and Service (2003)

  3. Steve graduated from Nevada H.S. (Nevada, IA) in 1966; University of Northern Iowa (1970 bachelor’s degree); Colorado State University (1972 master’s degree); Virginia Tech (1975 doctoral degree)

  4. Steve was elected to public office three times and served on the Denver Community School District Board of Education (Denver, IA) for 11 years, serves on the Advisory Board of Discerning Wealth Ameriprise Financial Services (Cedar Falls, IA) and is a member of the Cedar Falls Lions Club, Lions Clubs of Iowa and Lions Clubs International

  5. Steve is married to Doris J. Kelley (Iowa House of Representatives, 2007-2011; Chair/Vice-Chair - Iowa Board of Parole, 2011-2014; Chair, Iowa’s 19th Amendment Centennial Commemoration, 2017-2021)

  6. Steve has three sons, three daughters-in-laws and three grandchildren

  7. My attempt at writing op-eds since 2013 has been to try my best at shifting from today’s journalism style of “my truth” to old-school journalism focused on “research-based truth” and as close to scholarly research as possible to restore journalism credibility and provide a value-added op-ed to the reader.” - SBC

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