Fox’s sleight of hand: Compare other parts of this bill to laws in blue states — but inaccurately.
One major talking point in the network’s latest coverage is to say that voting laws in Delaware are more stringent than even the new Texas proposals, claiming that Biden’s home state does not even offer early voting or no-excuse absentee ballots. But this is a dishonest series of talking points that already circulated months ago, and it ignores the actual election practices in Delaware during the 2020 election and going forward.
For example, while Delaware still requires voters to provide an excuse for absentee voting, the state declared in 2020 that concerns about the COVID-19 pandemic would be a valid excuse. This move effectively opened up universal access to mail-in voting as an emergency measure — something that Texas steadfastly refused to do. In addition, Delaware is now preparing to implement in-person early voting in 2022, and a bill has also been introduced in the legislature to provide for no-excuse absentee voting on a permanent basis.
During the June 1 edition of America’s Newsroom, Republican Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick made a misleading comparison between his state’s new bill and the voting laws in Delaware: “We have two weeks of early voting — which is two weeks more than the president’s home state of Delaware has; they have none — so this is not voter suppression.” A similar comparison was made later during The Faulkner Focus by Republican panelist Matt Gorman. In both cases, the anchors offered no pushback or clarification. And in both instances, Fox’s purported “straight news” side showed a series of visuals meant to contrast a “claim” or “fiction” about the Texas voting bill with a “fact” about it — none of which addressed the bill’s design to make overturning an election much easier.
Then on Tuesday’s edition of Outnumbered, Fox News anchor Harris Faulkner teamed up with co-host Kayleigh McEnany to push a series of false equivalencies about voting laws.
During McEnany’s time working as both White House press secretary and Trump campaign adviser, she promoted a variety of election misinformation and also called for the Georgia state legislature to overturn the election. Such efforts might have stood a better chance of succeeding under this Texas bill’s provisions and in combination with a friendly judge — but she and Faulkner did not discuss that element of the story.