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   az.politics      Arizona politics      3,152 messages   

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   Message 2,639 of 3,152   
   Leroy N. Soetoro to All   
   The strange election anomalies in Arizon   
   25 Nov 22 21:21:28   
   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.elections, sac.politics   
   XPost: alt.politics.republicans, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.trump   
   From: democrat-criminals@mail.house.gov   
      
   https://dailyangle.com/articles/the-strange-election-anomalies-in-arizona   
      
   The Democrats, MSM and RINOs are complaining about voters' concerns over   
   election fraud, saying "we need to move on," "quit living in the past,"   
   and "no one cares about it as an issue; you're hurting the Republican   
   Party to continue focusing on it." There may be a grain of truth in all of   
   that, but it's outweighed by the fact that if we don't stop the fraud, we   
   may never get another Republican president into office and more states   
   will turn blue.   
      
   No one really believes deep down that Arizona rejected four top Republican   
   candidates – three who were leading in almost every poll, including MSM   
   polls – considering the breakdown of voter registration in the state.   
   Republicans have a 4-point voter registration advantage over Democrats in   
   the state as well as within Maricopa County. Republican candidates swept   
   the rest of the races around the state, leading many to believe only those   
   four top races, which featured all Trump-endorsed candidates, were   
   deliberately targeted.   
      
   Other than those four key races, Arizona Republicans performed exceedingly   
   well in the election, reminiscent of 2020 when only Trump (and weak Senate   
   candidate Martha McSally) lost. The GOP flipped Arizona's congressional   
   delegation back to majority Republican, winning two open seats, took back   
   a seat on the Arizona Corporation Commission that was lost in 2018, gained   
   two seats on the Central Arizona Project board, and kept both chambers of   
   the Arizona Legislature, including getting an even more conservative   
   Senate president, Warren Petersen. Numerous new conservative candidates   
   were elected to school boards, and the party appears almost certain to   
   take back superintendent of schools from the incumbent Democrat. Several   
   of the candidates in those races, including a couple of legislative   
   candidates who won, were endorsed by Trump.   
      
   Voters are wondering how incumbent Republican State Treasurer Kimberly Yee   
   received more votes than any of the other statewide candidates – about   
   100,000 more than GOP gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake – even though she   
   had low name recognition, was not endorsed by Trump, didn't get the base   
   excited and conducted a relatively quiet, uneventful first term. It's not   
   because Yee didn't have a significant opponent; State Sen. Martin Quezada   
   is one of the most well-known and popular Democrats in the state. On the   
   other hand, Lake brought out thousands to huge rallies and was considered   
   a Trump-like sensation across the state, with huge name recognition due to   
   being a longtime popular news anchor in the Phoenix market.   
      
   One of the main theories going around in Arizona is that since bad actors   
   knew Republicans were going to vote heavily on Election Day, they focused   
   their efforts there instead of on mail-in ballots. They speculate that   
   someone on the inside, likely a tech inspector, was paid a large amount of   
   money to incorrectly adjust the settings on printers located in heavily   
   Republican precincts the night before, after the final tests of equipment   
   were performed, throwing in a handful of blue precincts for distraction.   
   Well over 350% more Republicans than Democrats voted in person on Election   
   Day in Maricopa County.   
      
   There are many reports accumulating of the misread ballots being   
   commingled with ballots that had already been tabulated correctly at the   
   vote centers, stored in "black satchels" instead of secure "Door 3" boxes   
   as promised, lacking a chain of custody, or not tabulated when voters went   
   to check the status of their ballots afterward at beballotready.vote. The   
   Lake campaign is readying lawsuits, compiling stories from voters who   
   believe they were disenfranchised.   
      
   Arizona law provides for a new election if there is evidence of illegal   
   votes or a candidate did not receive enough to win. However, unless there   
   is a super smoking gun, like a bad actor coming forward and admitting   
   bribery – and who wants to do that and go to prison? – the courts are not   
   likely to do anything about it, as we've learned from previous experience.   
      
   Election-fraud experts tell me it's part of a plan by Democrats to take   
   over states one by one. First they started with states like California,   
   Washington and Oregon. They moved on to states like Colorado and Nevada.   
   Arizona happens to be their latest target. One election-fraud expert in   
   California believes there are actually rather close numbers of Republicans   
   and Democrats in that state, but due to years of election fraud there, no   
   one bothers investigating anymore, allowing it to become rampant.   
      
   What can we do? In Arizona, with Democrats almost certain to control the   
   top state offices of governor, secretary of state and attorney general,   
   nothing will be done to improve election integrity. Arizona State Rep.   
   Jake Hoffman gave me some hope, suggesting increasing the number of   
   observers and those working at the polls in 2024. Many credit Virginia's   
   red turn in 2021 to all the observers. The RNC said it trained 3,500   
   observers for Virginia's election. In Democratic counties, the poll   
   watchers were 2-1 Republicans. The year before, some of those counties had   
   no Republican observers at all.   
      
   No one wants to talk about election fraud anymore because they risk being   
   sued or even prosecuted, kicked off Big Tech platforms, or shunned by   
   powerful Republicans with money, who are often referred to as RINOs due to   
   their heavy conflicts of interest. In order to keep their money flowing   
   in, these powerful players have to keep up many alliances and contracts   
   with people who don't share conservative values. There's no easy solution   
   there, because without funding, who's going to pay to get the conservative   
   message out? There aren't enough millionaires and billionaires who can   
   operate outside of those entanglements.   
      
   So many people just nod and wink and pretend there's no election fraud in   
   order to keep their funding, labeling anyone concerned about it as "crazy"   
   or "conspiracy theorists," which often destroys their reputations and   
   careers and makes them question their sanity. Stories of mass election   
   fraud, like the type "2,000 Mules" exposed in Yuma County, go ignored. The   
   focus needs to be on figuring out how to turn this type of messaging   
   around, vindicating those who question the obvious instead of ridiculing   
   them.   
      
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   The post The strange election anomalies in Arizona appeared first on WND.   
      
      
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   "LOCKDOWN", left-wing COVID fearmongering.  95% of COVID infections   
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