‘#MayorCheat’: Online conspiracy theories flourish after Iowa caucus fiasco
Furious Bernie Sanders supporters are spreading conspiracy theories about the botched Iowa caucuses — and their anger is focused on one man.
Monday night could not have gone better for online troublemakers who have spent years propagating false or misleading conspiracy theories on the internet that the US election is rigged or vulnerable to tampering.
The delayed election results from the Iowa caucuses revealed some Democratic candidates’ supporters are so distrustful of the outcome that they peppered the internet with unproven claims that accused the Democratic Party of corruption by attempting to tilt the election in favour of a single candidate.
President Donald Trump and his supporters seized on that distrust by sending tweets Monday night with the hashtag #RiggedElection. Mr Trump’s own sons shouted “Rigged!” at an Iowa campaign event. And Republican Senator Lindsey Graham suggested in a tweet that the caucus issues were the result of a “Bernie blowout.”
It’s the type of conspiracy theory that experts fear will dog this year’s presidential race until Election Day.
“Democracy depends on the losers accepting election results,” said University of California, Irvine, Professor Richard Hasen, whose book Election Meltdown was published Tuesday in what he said was an ominous coincidence. “Now we’re starting off the election season with seeds of doubt, which is terrible.”
Check out MSNBC try to make sense of how Bernie wins both the first and second rounds of voting yet is somehow supposedly trailing in delegates ð¤#BernieWon pic.twitter.com/WLk8sv56x7
— Eric Blanc (@_ericblanc) February 4, 2020
In recent months, social media users have promoted conspiracy theories around the legitimacy of election results around the country, from a gubernatorial race in Kentucky to statehouse races in Virginia.
The tweets Monday began spreading minutes after the Iowa Democratic Party announced it was reviewing results for “quality control.” The app used by the Iowa Democratic Party to collect results Monday experienced technical glitches that left the caucus results in limbo through Tuesday.
“Quality control = rigged?” Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale said in a tweet that has since been shared and liked more than 20,000 times.
Quality control = rigged? ð¤ https://t.co/rJY3gdRccE
— Brad Parscale - Text TRUMP to 88022 (@parscale) February 4, 2020
As the delay of final results continued into Tuesday, social media users spread theories of complex schemes that were deployed to keep the results hidden in order undermine certain Democratic candidates such as Senator Bernie Sanders.
Many of the tweets suggested the Democratic Party or the Democratic National Convention intentionally bungled the caucus results, even though the Iowa Democratic Party administered Monday’s caucus.
“Iowa is just the start guys,” wrote one Twitter user, who has a profile picture of himself in a Bernie Sanders T-shirt. “The Democratic Party will not allow Bernie to win.” The online conspiracy theories, in some cases, were based on easily debunked or misleading claims.
Sorry, folks. I did NOT have anythjng to do with building the Iowa caucus app. I dont know anything about it, had no role in it, and dont own a company that makes mobile appa. Please contact @iowademocrats with questions about it.
— Robby Mook (@RobbyMook) February 4, 2020
For example, Facebook and Twitter posts falsely suggested that former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, Sanders’ opponent in the 2016 primary, had a hand in developing the ill-fated app used to collect the Iowa results. Further fuelling that distrust was that three of the senior executives at Shadow Inc., which created the app, previously worked for Clinton’s failed campaign.
We will apply the lessons learned in the future, and have already corrected the underlying technology issue. We take these issues very seriously, and are committed to improving and evolving to support the Democratic Partyâs goal of modernizing its election processes.
— Shadow, Inc. (@ShadowIncHQ) February 4, 2020
Some posts, which were shared thousands of times, accused former Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook of creating the app. In a tweet, Mr Mook said he “did not have” anything to do with building the caucus app. Mr Mook did not immediately return The Associated Press’ request for comment.
Other online posts placed blamed the problem on a new culprit: Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg, the former South Bend, Indiana, mayor who unsuccessfully ran to be the Democratic party’s chairman three years ago.
Some social media users insisted he had pulled off a scam to delay the results with the help of party insiders. Others wrongly asserted that Mr Buttigieg’s campaign had developed the app used for the Iowa caucus. Other social media posts pointed out that the founder of a non-profit organisation that launched Shadow Inc. last year is married to a senior adviser for Pete Buttigieg’s 2020 campaign.
0% reporting in Iowa
— Genie (@californalovers) February 4, 2020
Pete Buttigieg: #MayorCheat #IowaCaucas pic.twitter.com/5aABJyyNKb
By Tuesday morning, #MayorCheat was trending on Twitter, where it was mentioned more than 120,000 times by the afternoon.
The hashtag was first sent by verified Twitter accounts, according to analysis by Ben Nimmo, a disinformation and security expert for social media analysis firm Graphika. As of Tuesday, there were no signs that foreign accounts were promoting the hashtag, he added. “This is Americans trolling Americans,” Mr Nimmo said. “That’s the really worrying thing in 2020.”
That misinformation is partly rooted in the fact that Mr Buttigieg’s campaign has paid Shadow Inc., the company behind the Iowa caucus app, for software.
Mr Buttigieg’s campaign paid $US42,500 to Shadow Inc. for text messaging software in July. Other Democrats, including former Vice President Joe Biden, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand and the Texas Democratic Party, have contracted with Shadow for similar services, federal campaign finance data show.
Bernie won big tonight, even though sniveling #MayorCheat pulled a little trick. NH is gonna be huge, and weâre gonna win this thing pic.twitter.com/roplV1gdDD
— jack allison (@jackallisonLOL) February 4, 2020
The Buttigieg campaign did not help develop the app used in Iowa, a campaign spokesman confirmed Tuesday to the AP.
In a statement on Twitter, Shadow Inc. apologised for the delays and confirmed it had “contracted with the Iowa Democratic Party to build a caucus reporting mobile app for local officials to use” Monday.
State fundraising reports from Iowa’s Democratic Party show party officials paid more than $US63,000 to the same firm in November and December for “professional fees.”
Acronym, a Democratic non-profit group, last year said it was “launching” Shadow but now appears to be distancing itself from the app company.
Tara McGowan, Acronym’s founder and chief executive, has expressed support for Mr Buttigieg. In January last year she tweeted, “Mayor Pete is running”, with heart-eye emojis.
— The CIA â¤ï¸ Pete Buttigieg (@NarcJoeKennedy) February 4, 2020
The Iowa results were backed up by paper ballots, which is what the Iowa Democratic Party is using to verify the results. Figures reflecting 62 per cent of precincts in the state were released Tuesday afternoon.
Virginia Senator Mark Warner, a Democrat who is vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, warned that foreign groups looking to destabilise the US could try to exploit the doubts and fears spread online over the Iowa results. He said the Iowa episode should serve as an “early warning sign” that Congress, local election officials and social media platforms must do more to protect election integrity.
“It does … reinforce the fact, as we have started to see over the internet, conspiracy theories pop up, that whether domestic or foreign efforts to undermine confidence in our elections, that those threats are out there,” Mr Warner said to reporters Tuesday.
Hi.
— David Slack (@slack2thefuture) February 4, 2020
While I canât yet prove it, I feel safe in saying that both #BernieWon and #MayorCheat are trending because Russian propaganda accounts are amplifying them.
Putinâs goal is to divide us. Instead, letâs stand together, elect Democrats, and sanction his ass out of office.
In November, for example, social media posters exaggerated small-scale voting problems in Kentucky to suggest the results of the governor’s races were spoiled by dead people voting or misprinted ballots.
The now-former Republican Governor Matt Bevin requested a recanvass of the results because of what he said were “irregularities” after the initial vote tally put his re-election bid behind by 5000 votes — but he refused to provide evidence of those problems. Mr Bevin, a Republican, later conceded to now-Governor Andy Beshear, a Democrat.
These type of cases show it’s important for the presidential candidates to foster trust in the system among their supporters, said Charles Stewart III, a political science professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
“I really wish and hope that the candidates will recognise that if they don’t defend the system when it can be defended that they are doing harm to democracy and doing harm to devalue the nomination they’re seeking,” Mr Stewart said.