Trump’s blistering posts accusing “Dumocrats” of “stealing” California’s primary races tapped into a deep well of frustration that long predates this election. Voters are watching days turn into weeks as mail‑in ballots arrive and are counted at a glacial pace, just as certain candidates—like progressive Nithya Raman—suddenly surge from apparent defeat to unexpected revival. Each new batch of ballots fuels suspicions that the outcome is being managed, not merely measured.
Newsom’s office insists the delays are simply the product of laws designed to expand access and security. But critics argue that a system this slow, this opaque, and this favorable to one side is inherently corrosive. When prediction markets swing wildly and results dribble out in a pattern that benefits the political establishment, the damage goes beyond one race. The real crisis is that millions no longer believe the count.