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Billionaire George Soros has been the subject of numerous conspiracy theories over the years, mainly due to his financial support of liberal and pro-democracy causes. A persistent one that claims the philanthropist has sway over voting machines used in U.S. elections came up again before the Nov. 8 midterm elections. A Nov. 6 Instagram post read, They’re trying to rig the election again! Do not trust the Soros funded voting machines!!! The Instagram post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.) We’ve debunked similar claims about Soros and voting machines in the past, as have other fact-checkers . Soros doesn’t own or invest in any companies that make voting machines, said Michael Vachon, a spokesperson for Soros. He called the Instagram post’s claim bogus and nonsensical. Local city and county governments are largely responsible for financing elections, which includes purchasing voting equipment. State and federal governments also provide some funding. In 2020, the Center for Tech and Civic Life stepped in to offer $350 million in grants to election offices around the country, due to unexpected expenses to safely hold elections during the COVID-19 pandemic. The center is funded by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative — a philanthropy primarily funded by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan. But such private funding is not common. After backlash over the grant money in the 2020 election, 21 states have since passed laws that ban, limit or regulate the use of private or philanthropic money for elections. There’s no evidence that Soris has provided any funding to election offices. A look at grants awarded by Open Society Foundations , the nonprofit group founded by Soros, did not show any such grants in 2020. Though this claim didn’t specify a particular voting machine or technology company, past claims have tried, and failed, to tie Soros’ money to Smartmatic and Dominion Voting Systems . Sidney Powell, an attorney with former President Donald Trump’s 2020 campaign, and others pushed a baseless conspiracy that the two companies worked with Soros and Venezuela to steal the election from Trump. False election tampering claims have resulted in defamation lawsuits filed by both companies. There is a thin connection between Smartmatic and Soros. Mark Mulloch-Brown was formerly the chairman of Smartmatic while also serving as a global board member for Open Society Foundations. Mulloch-Brown was appointed president of Soros’ foundation in January 2021, and is no longer chairman of Smartmatic. Open Society Foundations, which bills itself as the world’s largest private funder of independent groups working for justice, democratic governance, and human rights, has denied any connection between Soros, the nonprofit and voting machines. The nonprofit wrote in a 2020 Facebook post that, Neither we nor our founder George Soros has anything to do with voting machines and how they function. Smartmatic’s equipment was not used in the 2016 election, and was only used in Los Angeles County in 2020 and in the 2022 midterms . The system provided to the county does not count, tabulate or store votes, Smartmatic said on its website . It provides ballot-marking devices and other technology, according to Smartmatic . Smartmatic also said on its website that Soros has no involvement in the company. Dominion said in a Jan. 25, 2021, court filing that it, too, has no connection to Soros. Our ruling An Instagram post claims that election machines are funded by Soros in an attempt to rig the midterm elections. Soros has no stake in any company that makes voting machines, his spokesperson said. There is also no evidence that Soros has provided grant money to elections officials to buy equipment. We rate this False.
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