News
May 20, 2022

News Roundup: Gone Rogue

As false claims about election fraud continue to reverberate around the country, a Wisconsin judge raised concerns that the state’s election inquiry is out of control.

“Gone rogue.” That was a Wisconsin judge’s assessment of Michael Gableman — the lead investigator conducting the Wisconsin Assembly’s partisan review of the 2020 election — after the Assembly and Speaker Robin Vos once again failed to turn over records from the inquiry to American Oversight.

We were back in court in Wisconsin again this week for hearings in two of our lawsuits seeking the release of public records from the election review, and just like in several previous court appearances, the attorney representing Vos and the Assembly claimed that they were unable to compel Gableman — who works for and under the legal authority of the Assembly — to release documents. 

“What you’re telling me is Mr. Vos hired a contractor who should be under his control and direction and he’s just run amok and is flatly refusing to follow any of the court’s guidance or orders that subject Mr. Vos to liability,” said Dane County Circuit Court Judge Valerie Bailey-Rihn, as quoted by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. The hearing also featured several exchanges invoking Batman

The court has already found Vos and the Assembly in contempt for the failure to comply with previous orders to release records, and on Thursday, the judge gave them “one last crack” at complying with her orders and avoiding fines, setting another hearing in June to review the matter again. 

Beyond Wisconsin, the continued false claims that “fraud” somehow marred the 2020 presidential election — despite no evidence of such fraud having yet emerged — are already infecting the upcoming 2022 midterm elections. As the New York Times reported this week after several states held primary contests, election deniers will be on ballots across the country this fall, raising the chance that the “November midterms may well affect the fate of free and fair elections in the country.”

Arizona’s “Audit” Lawsuit: One Year Later

This week marked one year since we were forced to go to court to try to compel the Arizona Senate to comply with the state’s public records laws and release records from the sham “audit” of 2020 ballots cast in Maricopa County. 

The partisan election review has been over for more than six months — but the Senate and its lead contractor, Cyber Ninjas, have continued to fight in court to block the public from seeing the full record of what happened, who was involved, and how the inquiry was conducted. 

On Thursday, we released a new report that highlights major findings from our investigation of the Arizona Senate’s partisan “audit.” Thousands of pages of documents that have been released in response to our litigation have revealed the politically biased and conspiracy-rooted origins of the “audit,” as we detailed in our first report last September. Since then, we have continued to uncover yet more evidence that this sham “audit” was an anti-democratic tactic to undermine faith in the 2020 election results.

We also obtained another batch of those records this week, shedding more light on the huge sums of money that Cyber Ninjas paid to its subcontractors in the early months of the operation.

The Pandemic Surges (again)

Biden administration officials warned this week of surging cases across the country and urged Americans to return to taking personal precautions such as wearing masks. This latest wave comes after the CDC changed its warning levels in February, raising the standards for what are considered “high” levels of community risk and creating the appearance of low transmission nationwide — confusing individuals and causing concern among many public health experts, especially as data on cases is no longer reliable

  • According to experts, case counts are likely five to ten times as high as what official numbers depict. 
  • Hospitalization data, the CDC’s new focus, doesn’t capture the full extent of healthcare worker burnout, staffing shortages, and trauma after two years of successive waves of illness.
  • While the federal government is currently in charge of distributing Covid-19 vaccines, ongoing funding issues — as well as plans from Pfizer and Moderna to eventually shift to market channels to sell their vaccines and treatments — could create problems for vaccine access and costs in the future.

Case counts are increasing along with hospitalizations, which are at a daily average of more than 23,000

  • The government announced that it is offering eight free rapid antigen at-home tests to any household that requests them on covidtests.gov
  • The FDA authorized a booster vaccine for children ages 5 to 11.
  • Faulty PCR tests from Northshore Labs’ operations in Nevada reported staggering numbers of false negatives, according to emails obtained by ProPublica. The company used its political connections to secure testing agreements in the state.
  • A study found that more than 75 percent of people who developed long Covid were not sick enough to be hospitalized for their initial infection. 
  • MIssouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt is warning school districts that his office could sue if districts attempt to reinstate mask mandates.

Other Stories We’re Following

The Jan. 6 Investigation
  • Justice Dept. is said to request transcripts from Jan. 6 committee (New York Times)
  • Trump appointed State Department official met with election deniers on January 6 (CNN)
  • Select committee says GOP lawmaker led tour through Capitol complex day before Jan. 6 attack (Politico)
  • Barr is reportedly preparing for January 6 committee interview (Forbes)
The Big Lie and Attacks on Elections 
  • Voter ‘subversion:’ Trump Republicans push laws to make it easier to change elections, per report (USA Today
  • Arizona would likely see recounts after every election under popular bill (AZ Mirror
  • Arizona Republican Party wants to throw out vote-by-mail (12news)
  • Wis. Democrats file first-of-its-kind suit vs. fake Trump electors (Washington Post)
  • Midterm stakes grow clearer: Election deniers will be on many ballots (New York Times)
  • Mesa County DA finds no criminal evidence following investigation into Tina Peters’ fraud claims (Colorado Newsline)
National News
  • Beyond immigration: ICE’s massive surveillance system has info on most Americans, report says (USA Today) 
  • Thousands of migrants have been waiting for months to enter U.S. (New York Times)
  • Supreme Court limits review of factual disputes in immigration cases (CNN
  • Leaked memo shows DHS preparing for violence after abortion ruling (Axios
  • How the Biden administration let right-wing attacks derail its disinformation efforts (Washington Post
  • US fracking boom could tip world to edge of climate disaster (The Guardian)
  • Supreme Court Justices Subjected to Stricter Financial Disclosure Rules (Time)
In the States
  • A dozen Arizona GOP lawmakers follow at least 1 far-right Facebook group (AZ Mirror
  • This Texas border militia says it’s working to stop human trafficking (LA Times)
  • South Carolina governor signs transgender sports ban bill (NBC News
  • Oklahoma legislature passes bill banning almost all abortions (New York Times