• Show Notes

Be Forewarned: The Consequences are Real

Dear Reader,

To anybody interested in contesting the 2024 election: go right ahead.

First, check your stateā€™s laws, and, if permitted, request an official recount. Most (not all) states allow some form of recount, either automatic or by request, typically depending on the vote margin. You might also have a legal right to request a post-election audit (emphasis on post-election) but remember this is a mechanical process and not some inquisition for digital hanging chads. If youā€™ve already filed a lawsuit challenging mail-in ballots or vote tabulation, then best of luck to you. But to manage expectations, keep in mind the broad legal principle that courts shouldnā€™t make changes to voting methodology shortly before an election. So, for the sake of your lawsuit, I hope you filed it a long time ago.

But beyond all that, please take a lesson from (very) recent history: if you cross the line, there will be consequences. Hereā€™s a handy list of some things you might be considering that are sure to land you in varying depths of shit.

Iā€™ll start by assuming nobodyā€™s seriously thinking of storming anything, anyplace, or anyone. If you need a reminder on that, hereā€™s a handy database, created by the United States Department of Justice, to track the 1200-plus federal criminal prosecutions of folks who attacked the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Click around for some specific reminders: Get 35 to 43 months, like Charles Donohoe of Kernersville, North Carolina, or 57 months like Ryan Swoope of Mentor, Ohio. And for those considering inciting a mob, or sowing chaos to create delay and confusion, even from a safe physical distance ā€“ highly recommended that you give that a pass.

Feeling like you might want to seek a remedy in court, rather than at the end of a sharpened flagpole? Ok, but letā€™s be responsible. As we discussed up front, go ahead and request a recount, if your stateā€™s law allows. But letā€™s steer clear of making up facts and inventing conspiracy theories and filing patently false court papers. Thatā€™ll get you indicted, sued, or disbarred ā€“ maybe even all three, if you aspire to become the next Rudy Giuliani.

Relatedly: If anybody approaches and asks you to sign onto a slate of electors for the candidate other than the one who your state actually voted for ā€“ thatā€™s a red flag. I recommend you politely decline. A few dozen folks tried that last time, and now many of them are criminal defendants. Hereā€™s another handy database, compiled by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, tracking those cases. (Anytime itā€™s in database form, take that as a warning.)

Another sure way to avoid landing at the defendantā€™s table in criminal court: donā€™t tap into voting machines, either digitally or with a hammer and a screwdriver. Yes, some states allow for post-election audits but the thing is, thereā€™s no do-it-yourself option on the menu. Leave it to the actual public officials in charge of elections.

This next part is directed at an admittedly niche audience. If you happen to be a leading Constitutional scholar, or if you sometimes pretend to be one, letā€™s tread carefully with bad-faith legal justifications for coup attempts. Iā€™m all for creativity and aggression in legal proceedings. But when you know your argument is doomed, and when you make it to help out a broader effort to throw the electoral system into chaos, you do so at your own risk. You might find yourself listed as a co-conspirator in a federal case (not great for the old professional reputation) or even facing state-level indictment.

Finally, letā€™s watch what we say out there. Yes, itā€™s an election, and yes, political speech is entitled to the broadest First Amendment protection. But if we intentionally lie about folks, they might sue for defamation. If you feel like promoting bogus theories about election fraud on a broad scale, I hope you have $787 million or so to spare. Or if youā€™d just prefer to fabricate and spread vicious lies about completely innocent election workers, $150 million or so should do the trick.

Donā€™t let me bring the mood down. The election is right around the corner, and itā€™s a wonderful time to express and exercise the whole gamut of Constitutional rights. Vote, talk smack, knock on doors, post on social media, stare at the shaky probability needle on those data analytics websites, donate money to your favorite candidate, give somebody a ride to the polling place (totally legal by the way), get in arguments with your family members over text, call in to a radio show, put up a lawn sign, watch the returns, yell and scream in delight or frustration, Itā€™s a dramatic time. Itā€™s how our system works. Lean into it.

But letā€™s also learn a lesson from the past few years. This isnā€™t The Purge, a special day when no laws apply. The lines are fairly well defined now, given all weā€™ve been through the past four years, and theyā€™re pretty far out on the extremes. So letā€™s respect those boundaries, letā€™s protect ourselves, and letā€™s practice some democracy.

Stay Informed,

Elie