When the people behind the sham “audit” in Arizona released their report on Friday, siding with Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election but still attempting to cast doubt on the democratic process that birthed it, too many sources in the media were quick to celebrate what they saw as a victory. In their adulation and with their framing that the results were confirmation of what we’ve known for some time now, mainstream media both legitimized a process that continues to put our electoral system at risk and ignored the threats the report actually represented.
Before the report’s release, it would not have been unreasonable to expect the results would attempt to further sow distrust in the democratic process by denying Biden’s victory. After all, the entire process was financed by supporters of an ex-president who continues to claim he won and run by a company whose CEO has deep ties to conspiracy theorists who claim the election was stolen.
Yet, as was pointed out by several sources online, when the report stated what legitimate sources had already shown, many mainstream outlets broke the news with headlines that perpetuated the narrative that the results were grounded in a legitimate process. They used euphemisms to describe the findings of a sham process intended to throw out thousands of legally cast votes and undermine the electoral system, and they cast the results as a verification of official counts.
To be fair, many of the resulting articles did at the very least point out that those involved were financed by right-wing sources and used a highly flawed methodology. However, many outlets were too transfixed on printing another loss for former President Donald Trump to properly frame the report as what it truly was — the findings of a fraudulent process. Furthermore, as Greg Sargent of The Washington Post pointed out, many outlets failed to recognize that the report still tried to cast doubt on the system.