Pro-Trump contenders who maintain the 2020 presidential contest was 'rigged' against the former president are shifting their focus to new election and ballot security measures anchored by online conspiracy theories.
, have watermark designs and QR codes to ensure mail-in ballots reach the correct voters.
Those in attendance, Hamm said, were provided with multiple examples of traceable ballots that could be used in future elections. "Our clients range from Fortune 100 companies, national governments and various government agencies and central banks in the United States and around the globe," he said.But traceable ballots are more than an election security proposal among far-right activists or conservative contenders backed by Trump.
Republican consultants, strategists and officials across the country have openly fretted that Trump and his allies' continual insistence on pointing to voter fraud is a losing campaign strategy that only depresses the conservative base. Republican Rep. Liz Cheney, of Wyoming, an outspoken Trump critic, beseeched her GOP colleagues on Tuesday to admit election fraud is not to blame for the party's election woes.