Rematching 'Citizen Kane' today and this part just seemed fitted for this election cycle.
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Citizen Kane
RandomNJ — 9 years ago(November 04, 2016 11:22 AM)
Rematching 'Citizen Kane' today and this part just seemed fitted for this election cycle.
When Kane loses the election, the editors looking at the banner headline they had prepared: KANE ELECTED and then one of them say :
"This one?" says someone , picking up the alternate front page the paper had prepared: "FRAUD AT POLLS!"
Jump to today election and we have our own version of this: If I win, the results are legit, if I lose, it was rigged. -
HarvSoul — 1 month ago(January 31, 2026 03:32 AM)
It is eerie how a film from 1941 manages to feel like it was written in a modern green room. That scene perfectly captures the "Heads I win, tails you cheated" mentality that has become a staple of modern political theater.
In the film, that moment reveals everything about Kane’s relationship with the truth. He wasn't interested in reporting the news; he was interested in manufacturing reality.
Here is why that "Fraud at Polls" headline still resonates so strongly today:
The Infallible Ego: For a man like Kane (or many modern leaders), losing isn't just a political defeat; it’s a psychological impossibility. If the "People" didn't choose him, it couldn't be because they disliked him—it must be because the system was broken.
The Press as a Weapon: Kane’s Inquirer didn't wait for an investigation to print that headline. They had it pre-set in lead type. It shows that for Kane, the media was simply a megaphone for his own grievances.
The "Chosen" Narrative: Just as Susan had to be a great singer to justify his affair, he had to be the governor to justify his ego. When the voters rejected him after the "love nest" scandal, the "Fraud" headline was his way of protecting his pride from the public's judgment.
Orson Welles based much of this on the real-life William Randolph Hearst, who famously told a photographer, "You furnish the pictures and I'll furnish the war." The "Fraud at Polls" headline is just the 1940s version of a viral conspiracy theory