One by one, the activists claimed to have evidence of "fraud on a massive scale," repeating discredited claims about election machines championed a year earlier by conspiracists such as My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell.
Although ex-President Donald Trump won nearly two-thirds of the vote in central Minnesota's Crow Wing County in 2020, a group of county residents appeared in droves to urge their government to follow other states in opening up the previous election's ballots in search of malfeasance.
"My heart is telling me that there is something drastically wrong with this election," said Rick Felt, an Army veteran living in the county. "And I urge all of you to follow your heart."
Felt joined a chorus that, starting in October, mounted a vocal months-long campaign that led to a vote last week by Crow Wing County's governing body to formally ask for a new audit of the 2020 election.
They ignored the results of the already completed post-election review that found no widespread fraud in their county — or the annual pre-election equipment security tests done in public view. Instead, many in the group pointed to long-debunked conspiracy theories that still persist among millions of Americans who refuse to accept the results of last year's presidential election.
That they persuaded four of their county's five commissioners to request a new audit more than a year later now has state and local officials worried that such efforts could become a sign of things to come elsewhere even with preparations for this year's next statewide election already underway.
"Unfortunately this is another example, I fear, of disinformation taking root," said Secretary of State Steve Simon. "A generalized feeling or vibe or hunch — and it's probably being stirred up and whipped up by those with a political or financial interest in corroding democracy."
Election results already verified
Crow Wing County is already required by law to both check the security of its voting machines before each election and to confirm that paper ballots entered into the machines matched the vote totals afterward. Both processes are open to the public.