Wednesday Briefing: Casting Doubts on the U.S. Election

Plus, saving Japan’s most popular rice.

Representative Scott Perry of Pennsylvania holding a megaphone and standing on steps in front of a Stop the Steal rally.

As Donald Trump makes widespread claims that the Nov. 5 election will be rigged, a handful of his allies are already questioning this year’s voting. Their efforts could help lay the groundwork to once again undermine the results, should Trump lose.

Representative Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, who helped Trump try to overturn the 2020 election, is among those leading this effort. He and a group of Republican lawmakers have filed a lawsuit against their state’s government, alleging that its system to verify ballots cast by members of the military and Americans living abroad is insufficient. It’s one of about 100 cases filed by Republican allies related to topics like voter rolls and noncitizen voters. Election officials and other experts say that these claims are meritless.

Election Day is less than two weeks away.

  • Russia may act to stoke protests and even violence over the U.S. election results, intelligence officials warned yesterday.

  • Trump will record a podcast interview with Joe Rogan as part of his strategy to reach young men.

  • The Harris campaign hopes that a blitz of Facebook ads and WhatsApp channels will help win over disillusioned Muslim and Arab voters.

  • A Times analysis found that Project 2025, a conservative initiative to reshape the government, has numerous ties to Trump and his campaign, despite his claims otherwise.

Do you have questions about the election? Send them to us, and we’ll find the answers.

Hamas’s top commanders are mostly dead, its rank and file has been decimated and many of its hide-outs and stockpiles have been captured and destroyed. The group’s fighters are no match for Israel’s army in open combat, but that’s not how Hamas is fighting.


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