So the more early ballots we allow, the longer it takes them to count them. Makes perfect sense.
I think that's a typo. It should be Clackamas County Crook Sherry Hall.
and then they wonder why we think there is fraud...
We’ve been watching the rat districts post late results for years, always just enough to put them over the top.
I’ve seen a few where the pubs held back, and waited until the rats posted their, and the pubs won on those cases. It seemed like it was done deliberately.
We’ve been watching the rat districts post late results for years, always just enough to put them over the top.
I’ve seen a few where the pubs held back, and waited until the rats posted their, and the pubs won on those cases. It seemed like it was done deliberately.
Openly preparing to cheat?
So they don’t want people to see the cheat happening in real time. This should be illegal.
The absurdity continues.
And miraculously enough votes from the homeless camps will put Tina Kotek in the governor’s seat.
If you want the people to have confidence in their election system, this is not how you run it.
it’s how they steal the election
None of this makes any sense whatsoever. This is how elections are stolen. It’s time to go Brazil on these leftists!
Isn’t Clackamas a red county?
The Congress has already spoken as to the time and duration of the elections:
In 1845, the 28th Congress set a single date for states to appoint presidential electors. In 1792, the 2nd Congress decided presidential electors would vote on the first Wednesday in December, and electors must be chosen in the 34 days leading up to that date.7 More than half of the states in the early 1800s held presidential elections in early November.If Congress wants to change the law regarding the time and LENGTH of an election, they may do so. They have not. Any voting extensions (counting included) must be done on ELECTION DAY.
As travel and communication methods became faster in the 19th century, potential manipulation and fraud concerns grew due to different election days in different states: “The 34-day period during which elections could be held prolonged excitement and provided time for more intrigue.”
Members of the House, when debating a bill in 1844 that would set a uniform presidential Election Day across the country, declared the goal was “to guard against frauds in the elections of President and Vice President.”
In 1845, the 28th Congress set “the Tuesday next after the first Monday in the month of November” as the date for states to appoint presidential electors.11 The first unified presidential Election Day was November 7, 1848.12 Current law states that “the electors of President and Vice President shall be appointed, in each State, on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November, in every fourth year succeeding every election of a President and Vice President.”
In 1872, the 42nd Congress aligned House elections with presidential elections by scheduling them for “the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November” starting in 1876 and “in every second year thereafter.”
Current law states that “the Tuesday next after the 1st Monday in November, in every even numbered year, is established as the day for the election, in each of the States and Territories of the United States, of Representatives and Delegates to the Congress commencing on the 3d day of January next thereafter.”