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A baseless voting claim is being amplified by a network of social media accounts

Trays of mail in ballots are stacked at the Santa Clara County Registrar of Voters office on Oct. 21, 2024 in San Jose, Calif.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
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Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Trays of mail in ballots are stacked at the Santa Clara County Registrar of Voters office on Oct. 21, 2024 in San Jose, Calif.

It鈥檚 unclear who runs the network of social media accounts that has gotten millions of views amplifying trending claims about alleged voting fraud.

Updated October 31, 2024 at 16:51 PM ET

A network of accounts on the social media site X is claiming to be foreign nationals who have illegally voted in the U.S. presidential election, according to from the nonprofit Institute for Strategic Dialogue.

The accounts have multiple signatures that suggest they are coordinated, drawing the attention of researchers in the final stretch of election.

Some of the accounts have shared images of ballots alongside passports, including from countries that no longer exist, including the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany and Prussia, the disinformation and extremism reported. The accounts are reinforcing baseless narratives about voter fraud promoted by former President Donald Trump and his allies. The most popular post, sporting an image of a French passport, has racked up more than 12 million views on X, formerly Twitter.

ISD said that the first post from the network was published on Oct. 22, not long after Republicans filed lawsuits in a few swing states. Those lawsuits cast doubt on the eligibility of some overseas voters. Trump falsely claimed in a that Democrats intended to use overseas ballots to 鈥淐HEAT鈥 and manipulate the election results. The lawsuits have in the courts.

The Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, or UOCAVA, lets states set up systems to allow military members and American citizens living overseas to vote. The allegations surrounding the law are part of a larger narrative that the election will be stolen from Trump through a combination of lax voting laws and the possibility that noncitizens will illegally vote in large numbers and swing the very tight presidential race.

Multiple have found that noncitizen voting is extremely rare. Still, Trump-supporting Republicans have latched onto the idea and may use claims that noncitizens voted .

While the baseless claims about overseas voting frame Trump as the victim of illegal votes cast for Vice President Kamala Harris, many of the accounts that ISD identified boast that they actually voted for Trump in swing states.

鈥淚鈥檓 going to illegally vote for Donald Trump as a European national,鈥 said one post.

One sign that accounts may be coordinated is that many of the posts shared identical language and images. Some repeat the phrase 鈥淒emocrats had it coming for not enforcing voter ID laws.鈥 Republicans in many states have long pushed for stricter voter ID laws.

The accounts may have received algorithmic amplification from X. An ISD researcher received a push notification from X about one of the posts, even though the researcher did not follow the account. The posts have also circulated on the Telegram messaging app, where they have been promoted by accounts that share Russian propaganda, and the message board 4chan, ISD said.

In response to ISD's findings, an X spokesperson said in a statement "this is not a network or coordinated, these are users trying to create confusion or troll and have very, very small visibility, about 120 views each." The platform has yet to explain how the it defines coordination or how it calculated the average of 120 views, considering that one post received more than 10 million views.

ISD was unable to say who is behind the apparently coordinated network of accounts. Influence operations run by foreign governments are known to to drive up tension and chaos in the U.S.

Copyright 2024 NPR

Huo Jingnan (she/her) is an assistant producer on NPR's investigations team. She helps with reporting, research, and production both on the team and in the network. She was the primary data reporter on Coal's Deadly Dust, a project investigating black lung disease's resurgence. The project won an Edward Murrow Award and NASEM Communications award, and was nominated for a George Foster Peabody award.