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Government Corruption |
How Will Anyone Trust The Georgia Runoff Results When There's Enough Illegal Voting To Tip The Scales? |
2022-11-30 |
![]() In a complaint filed earlier this month with the Georgia State Board of Elections, Mark Davis, an expert in voter data analytics and residency issues, alerted the state to data indicating that in both November 2020 and November 2022, thousands of Georgians may have voted illegally by moving but then, rather than re-registering to vote as required by the state’s election code, casting ballots in the county in which they no longer resided. Davis’s complaint noted that due to space constraints, he was providing his supporting data in a detailed letter to State Board of Elections member Ed Lindsey. That letter, obtained exclusively by The Federalist, highlighted the relevant portions of the Georgia election code and specifically OCGA 21-2-216(a)(4), which provides that "no person shall vote in any primary or election held in this state unless such person shall be, ’a resident of this state and of the county or municipality in which he or she seeks to vote.’" The election code further provides that if a voter changes his residence from one Georgia county to another county more than 30 days before the election, the person has lost his "eligibility to vote" in the county of his or her old residence. To vote, then, the individual "must register to vote in [his or her] new county or residence." And if the individual fails to "register to vote by the deadline," he or she "cannot vote in that particular election." Davis then detailed data he had gathered related to the November 2022 election. Data obtained from the National Change of Address database showed 637,456 Georgians provided notice of permanent changes of address. About 168,000 of the 637,456 change of address notices were for voters who moved from one Georgia county to another more than 30 days before the election but failed to re-register there. "Over 25,000 of them appear to have voted in the 2022 general election in their old counties," Davis wrote. Not all of the 25,000-plus Georgians who moved and then voted in their old county necessarily voted illegally. Rather, as Davis explained, some of those individuals "may be students away at school, or soldiers serving a tour of duty, or other people who had reason to file a permanent change of address for what was in reality a long-term temporary move." Yet data collected by Davis from the November 2020 general election indicates that at least 35 percent of the approximately 35,000 people who moved from one Georgia county to another county in the state and voted in their prior county had, in fact, moved permanently. In fact, the number of potentially illegal votes from November 2020 — 12,400 — exceeded Joe The Big GuyBiden ![]() ’s margin of victory over Trump in Georgia. |
Posted by:Fred |
#3 If it is still there, I have to wonder if people chuckle silently and peer away as they enter ? |
Posted by: Besoeker 2022-11-30 09:08 |
#2 A good while back, I "legally acquired" files containing the names and addresses of those "officially" issued 2020 Fulton/Dekalb Absentee ballots. Amazing how many people shared the same address and how many were registered in both counties, which I found just skimming the files. But the GA SOS did not find voting issues and certified the election |
Posted by: NN2N1 2022-11-30 09:03 |
#1 Sorry, I trust no voting results conducted by machines. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2022-11-30 02:25 |