Spalding County, GA:
Commissioners push to defund electronic voting systems, removing $85,000 from the Election Boards# budget.
Tonight the board, in a 5-0 vote, gave its consent for the Spalding County Board of Elections to take whatever action they deem reasonably prudent to… pic.twitter.com/3fzSCE6x6K— Seth Keshel (@RealSKeshel) June 28, 2023
Take back your elections one county at a time. If you don’t speak code, you have no idea what the machine is really doing. None of us do, including every election/poll worker. Who wants to put that much power in the hands of those who control the machines and write the code? https://t.co/K5AGHhK2pN— Lara Logan (@laralogan) June 28, 2023
Georgia gets it.
Thought it was worth posting the whole tweet here.
Thanks for the post.
Seth Keshel
@RealSKeshel
Spalding County, GA:
Commissioners push to defund electronic voting systems, removing $85,000 from the Election Boards# budget.
Tonight the board, in a 5-0 vote, gave its consent for the Spalding County Board of Elections to take whatever action they deem reasonably prudent to carry out open, fair and transparent elections, to include using paper ballots instead of the flawed machines.
The next Elections Board meeting will be held on this measure, July 11.
Spalding County Board of Elections recently testified at the State Election Board hearing to refute a dismissal of a case where the voting machines printed a ballot on what appeared to be notebook paper that was then accepted into the scanner as a cast vote.
This investigation is still underway as Kimberly Slaughter and her staff were not in violation of any wrongdoing, but reported the issue immediately and are, rightfully so, still demanding answers on what and how the machines were able to do this.
Alex Johnson, an elections expert of Bernard and Johnson, LLC, wrote a letter which was read into the record tonight by James R. Dutton, of Dutton & Dutton, LLC, in Griffin, Georgia, Vice Chairman of the Spalding County Board of Commissioners.