To: Alberta's Child
said, "state legislatures in question had every opportunity to fix — or even override — the election processes in their own states"
remember Jan 6 and 7th is the only time states are allowed to question other states vote count. Before then a state could turn in that they have a billion votes and they can recount their votes and still get a billion votes in a country with 350 million people.
Reminder voter turn out was over 50% greater then the largest turnout in US history of 2008. When 1% change makes or brakes elections. It was a statistical impossibility.
50 posted on
11/24/2022 8:40:28 AM PST by
Steve Van Doorn
(*in my best Eric Cartman voice* 'I love you, guys')
To: Steve Van Doorn
remember Jan 6 and 7th is the only time states are allowed to question other states vote count. Before then a state could turn in that they have a billion votes and they can recount their votes and still get a billion votes in a country with 350 million people. There is no “vote count” to consider on January 6/7. All they are doing is counting the electoral votes that were previously certified in December. The only reason for a state to question another state’s electoral votes is if there are multiple slates of electors sent from one state — one certified by the state election board and one submitted by the legislature, for example. The constitution is very clear that each state is free to establish its own method for choosing presidential electors.
52 posted on
11/25/2022 6:17:02 AM PST by
Alberta's Child
("It's midnight in Manhattan. This is no time to get cute; it's a mad dog's promenade.")
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