Below, we compile quotes from campaigns’ ads, websites, social media posts, and statements reported in the media that illustrate endorsement or opposition to election denial — claims that the process or result of the last presidential election was illegitimate. Each of the candidates is running for an office that will play a role in administering future elections in Texas. Information about the financing of these campaigns and those in other battleground states can be found here.
Texas: Election Denial in Races for Election Administration Positions
A collection of examples illustrates the prevalence of election denial in 2022 contests for the offices that will run the next elections in Texas.
Governor
Danny Harrison (lost primary)
Danny’s Harrison’s (R) campaign website critiqued the incumbent he is opposing in the primary, saying, “Where was Governor Abbott when the election was stolen from back in November?”
Don Huffines (lost primary)
The campaign website of Don Huffines (R), a former state senator, claims: “Illegal aliens have cast ballots in Texas elections” and “criminals [can] cast votes on behalf of dead people.” The page states that in 2020, the governor “allowed Democrat-run counties to flagrantly violate state election law while Republican poll watchers were denied access to observe ballot counting.” In February, the Huffines campaign sent an email to supporters claiming that an interim report on the Texas secretary of state’s audit of the 2020 election “proves that illegal aliens are voting in Texas elections” and criticizing Gov. Greg Abbott for allegedly opposing “a full forensic audit.” A campaign Facebook ad from August 2021 called for “a full forensic audit of the 2020 election results in our state’s largest counties.”
Chad Prather (lost primary)
Chad Prather (R), host of a show on the conservative Blaze TV outlet, has tweeted that “Stolen elections get people killed.” The “election integrity” section of his campaign website references conspiracy theories about the 2020 election, including proposals requiring that polling places be searched for “hidden boxes of suspect ballots, ” as well as having “buildings surrounded by trusted people for 48 hours (or until count is announced) to ensure no strange vehicles turn up with ‘found’ ballots.”
Allen West (lost primary)
Former member of Congress Allen West (R) has called for audits of the 2020 vote in Texas and said that the Harris County Clerk “should probably be in jail for what he tried to do in undermining Texas election law.” In an interview promoted by his campaign, West referenced “unconstitutional actions” by governors and judges to change election law
Hood County Clerk
Michelle Carew (lost primary)
Michelle Carew (R), the former appointed elections administrator for Hood County, criticized election denialism in her campaign announcement, decrying attempts “to control how elections are run, just to benefit a radical politically partisan group.” Carew entered the race after the incumbent clerk, Katie Lang, attacked her for allegedly being biased in running the election. Lang attempted to oust Carew, who eventually resigned and entered the race to challenge Lang. In a Washington Post op-ed published days before she declared her candidacy, Carew wrote that “the constant questioning of the 2020 election and the constant spread of lies foster an environment that encourages attacks against election officials.” She insisted that “the votes were counted fairly.”
Travis County Clerk
Susan Haynes (nominated)
On her campaign website, Travis County clerk candidate Susan Haynes (R), a nurse practitioner, writes: “There are lots of allegations, with some convincing data, that our elections have been manipulated for quite some time. . . . Voting machines are the mechanism by which elections are stolen. We must stop using machines and return to paper ballots, with sequential serial numbers, hand counted at the precinct level. Right now [there are] endless opportunities for data manipulation.” Haynes has centered her campaign on the promise that she will end “irregularities in elections.” One of the few posts on her campaign Facebook page says, in part, “No more election irregularities. Our votes will be heard.”
Dyana Limon-Mercado (won primary)
Dyana Limon-Mercado (D), the executive director of Planned Parenthood Texas Votes, has opposed election denial. On the anniversary of the January 6 riot to prevent Congress certifying President Biden’s Electoral College win, she tweeted a campaign video in which she claims, “Republicans spent 2021 trying to rig our elections in their favor.” The video criticizes Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s attempt to charge the outgoing Travis County clerk, Dana DeBeauvoir, with a crime over a dispute with a poll watcher. It concludes, “I’m running to protect our democracy and our local elections from Paxton, Abbott, and Trump.” A February tweet by Limon-Mercado calls on voters to “protect our elections from GOP meddling.”