On November 13, 2024 a group of seven election security experts wrote a letter to Kamala Harris that began with this line “We write to alert you to serious election security breaches that have threatened the security and integrity of the 2024 elections.” They outlined known vulnerabilities in election machinery, documented instances where Republican operatives obtained copies of election software that Dominion Voting admitted would cause “irreparable damage” to the “election security interests of the country.
” They urged Harris to challenge the narrow election wins in swing states and demand recounts and statistical verification of the results. Kamala Harris did not respond. Instead, during her concession speech she insisted that “we must accept the results of this election.” For someone who called Trump a “fascist” on the campaign trail, who had a career as a district attorney putting hardened criminals in jail and who frequently called out Trump’s propensity to lie, Harris’s unwillingness to believe that Trump could have put his finger on the scales was nothing less than a dereliction of duty. Indeed, just a few days later Trump seemed to admit to election interference when he congratulated Elon Musk’s knowledge of “vote counting computers” for his win in Pennsylvania. A few weeks later while meeting officials FIFA, Trump intimated his involvement a second time, saying: “They rigged the election and I won.”
In this week’s video I argue that Trump had the means, the motive and the opportunity to fix the 2024 election to his favor. The only question is whether or not he actually pulled the trigger on the plan.
There is no credible evidence that Donald Trump or his campaign “hacked” or interfered with the 2024 U.S. presidential election. Here’s what the facts show:
🛡️ Election Security & Expert Verification
- Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA)—along with state election offices—confirmed there was no malicious activity materially affecting the election infrastructure in 2024 New York Post+9AP News+9The Sun+9Al Jazeera+1AP News+1.
- Officials from swing states like Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Georgia stated that voting machines were never internet-connected, eliminating the possibility of remote tampering AP News.
🧪 Misinformation Claims Debunked
- Claims that votes were “disappeared” or “hacked” are false. Fact-checkers from Al Jazeera and CBS News verify no evidence supports such allegations Al Jazeera.
- Conspiracy theories about using Starlink or internet connections to manipulate results have been rejected by cybersecurity experts and state officials Al Jazeera+2AP News+2AP News+2.
🧠 Disinformation vs. Reality
- Analysts warn that while the internet was flooded with election-related rumors and misinformation — especially on platforms like X — none of these claims held up under scrutiny AP News+3The Guardian+3CBS News+3.
- Once it became clear Trump was on track to win, most baseless fraud narratives simply died down, signaling there was no substance behind them CBS News.
✅ Bottom Line
- No verifiable evidence exists that Trump “hacked” or otherwise compromised the 2024 election through technical means.
- Multiple official investigations, election security agencies, and post-election audits have all confirmed the results were secure and valid.
- The few hacking incidents that did occur — like phishing attacks — involved foreign actors (e.g., Iran) targeting campaign communications, not election vote manipulation The New Yorker+11Politico+11YouTube+11The Sun.
🧐 Want More?
- A breakdown of what election infrastructure audits involve.
- Insights into how phishing incidents differ from actual vote tampering.
- Coverage of foreign attempts to influence the election versus domestic manipulation.
Just let me know!
Sources on 2024 election security and misinformation
FACT FOCUS: Election officials knock down Starlink vote rigging conspiracy theories
Justice Department indicts three Iranians for hack-and-leak operation on Trump campaign
Sources
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