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Election interference
Election interference generally refers to efforts to change the outcome of an election, especially by illegitimate means. Kinds of election interference may include:
Electoral fraud, illegal interference with the process of an election
Vote buying, when a political party or candidate distributes money to a voter with the expectation that they will vote for them
Voter impersonation, when an eligible voter votes more than once or a non-eligible voter votes under the name of an eligible one
^Allsop, Jon (August 27, 2024). "The Election-Interference Merry-Go-Round". The New Yorker. ISSN0028-792X. Retrieved September 3, 2024. In October, 2020, Bob Ferguson, the attorney general of Washington State, launched an initiative to combat 'election interference'... This year, Ferguson ran for governor of Washington, as a Democrat. So, too, did Bob Ferguson, and Bob Ferguson. The latter Fergusons—a retired state employee and a military veteran, respectively—were recruited as candidates by Glen Morgan, a conservative activist. ('If I had started a little bit earlier, I would have been able to have six Bob Fergusons,' Morgan told the Seattle Times.) Allies of the original Ferguson accused Morgan of deliberately trying to confuse voters; in a tweet, Ferguson called the gambit 'election interference' and pointed out that the other Fergusons could be prosecuted under state law if they didn't withdraw.