Afghan Voice Agency (AVA): According to IRNA, according to the announcement of CNN, considering that the former president is nominated again in 2024, 12 lies that Trump is likely to tell on election night 5 November 2024 is as follows:
CNN's prediction of 12 possible claims of Trump on the night of the American elections.
1- False declarations of victory
As votes were still being counted on Election Night 2020, Trump mistakenly announced that he had won various states and it turned out that he had lost.
CNN says: Don't trust any candidate's victory announcements. You'll have to wait for the major media's unofficial predictions of the winner of each state and election.
2- The claim that Harris could not legally win
CNN continues: There is a possibility that Trump will win this election. But if Vice President Kamala Harris wins, Trump may repeat his pre-November false claims that the only way Harris could win was by cheating.
3- Claiming that the videos show inappropriate behavior
Social media is flooded with messages that misrepresent what is happening in election-related videos. For example, in 2020 and beyond, Trump and his allies claimed that a video showed obvious illegal activity by two election workers in Georgia, when in fact they were doing nothing wrong.
4- False claims that unintentional errors are destructive
In 2020, a small Michigan county made a mistake in its initial vote reporting and reported Trump's vote as if it belonged to Biden, and Trump and his allies used the error as the initial basis for a massive conspiracy. used and announced that the voting technology was manipulated to steal the election.
5- Alleging widespread fraud in cities dominated by Democrats
For years, Trump has falsely claimed that predominantly Democratic cities with large black populations, such as Philadelphia, Detroit, Milwaukee and Atlanta, are rife with election fraud.
6- Claiming to be suspicious of late night votes
Trump has repeatedly claimed that something was wrong with the supposed "emptying" of votes during the night hours of the 2020 election. In fact, these were ordinary votes that were counted as usual and added to the total as soon as possible.
7- Alleging that the counting of votes after the election day is suspicious
Trump, who in 2020 called for a "stop count" when the vote count showed him with a temporary lead over Biden, has sometimes questioned the legitimacy of vote counting after election night.
8- Allegations that postal votes are full of fraud
For four years, Trump has made false claims about mail-in ballots, falsely claiming that absentee or mail-in voting is rife with fraud.
9- Alleging the illegitimacy of the ballot accepted after the election day
Trump suggested in 2020 that mail-in ballots received after Election Day are illegitimate and should not be counted. False claims that there is no verification of military and overseas voters
In September, Trump alleged that Democrats were using military and overseas ballots to rig the election, saying the ballots were sent to people whose identities had not been verified.
10- Alleging that there is no verification of military and non-US voters
Trump claimed in September that Democrats were using military and overseas ballots to rig the election, falsely saying the ballots were sent to people whose identities had not been verified.
While the identity of these voters is verified by their local election offices when registering to participate in the elections.
11- Claiming mass voting of foreigners in elections
For years, Trump has falsely claimed that large numbers of foreigners are voting illegally in presidential elections. For example, even after winning the 2016 election, he claimed that millions of undocumented immigrants voted in California.
12. Claims about voter registration programs in Pennsylvania
In the week leading up to Election Day (November 5, 2024), Trump has claimed that more than 2,000 fake "votes" were found in a county in Pennsylvania.
It should be noted that the US presidential election will be held on Tuesday, November 5 of this year (20249), corresponding to 15 Scorpio 1403, and the polls show a tight competition between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, the two candidates of the Democratic and Republican parties, especially in the battleground and swing states. is
A candidate for the presidency in the United States, not by winning a majority of the popular vote, but through a system called the Electoral College, which allocates electoral votes to the 50 states and the District of Columbia, based largely on their population. and gets to the White House.
The seven key states for electing the next president of the United States of America are: Arizona, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania.
The Electoral College will meet on December 17 to officially cast their ballots and send the results to Congress. The candidate who gets 270 electoral votes or more becomes the president.
These votes will be officially tallied by Congress on January 6, and the new president will be sworn in on January 20.