virus image Shared by X He claims to show a stack of 2024 election ballots.
Screenshot captured via X
Verdict: False
The original image comes from Alamy and was also featured in an Associated Press article reprinted in the Boston Globe, but it shows the 2020 ballot instead of 2024.
Fact check:
The final results of a New York Times/Siena College poll show 2024 Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris leading 2024 Republican nominee and former President Donald Trump in three states, including North Carolina. That’s what I found out. outlet. The paper also reported that the same poll showed Trump leading Harris in Arizona.
The X image, which has been viewed more than 70,000 times as of this writing, claims to show a pile of 2024 election ballots. “For my next trick, I’m going to erase all the ballots for Donald Trump and Mark Robinson. Happy #ElectionDay #NCPol,” the post’s caption reads.
This claim is false as this image originally came from a stock image website. βAlamyβ
βOn Friday, October 2, 2020, in Wallingford, Conn., city worker Barbara Thompson prepares to deliver approximately 7,000 absentee ballots to the post office.Last Friday, November “It was the first day that ballots could be mailed for public voting. Elections. Ballots were delivered in a pickup truck with a covered bed,” the image’s caption reads.
Furthermore, the same image was also featured in the following article: Articles for November 2020 The Boston Globe republished an article from the Associated Press. This article focused on the large number of voters expected to vote in person in Connecticut during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Check Your Fact compares the viral image shared on X with the original image on Alamy, and the version shown on X is cropped. Thompson, the town clerk who appears in the original image, is noticeably absent from the viral version of the image shared by X. (Related: Facebook video doesn’t show ‘Ballot Mule’ in Lincoln, Nebraska)
moreover, lead story cited Alamy’s original image and labeled this claim false.
This is not the first time false claims about the 2024 presidential election have surfaced online. Check Your Fact previously debunked a post shared by X that claimed the Justice Department had discovered more than 300 cases of financially motivated voting.