By John Paluska, Founder of The Daily Fodder
As Texas goes to Washington to argue the most comprehensive voter fraud case in this nation's history, and Michigan embarks on the largest election audit in the state's history, another pertinent fact that blatantly challenges the "no evidence of voter fraud" claim percolates to the surface.
According to an official Michigan Board Canvasser Report, 72% of Detroit's absentee precincts had voting records that did not match the amount of people who actually voted. The official term is "unbalanced," but The Detroit News accurately explains what this means:
No big deal, right? Wrong. When a precinct is not “balanced,” the precinct is not subject to recount. Once a vote is tabulated, you don’t know who voted and who didn’t. If a precinct is not subject to recount, it is an invitation to insert or delete ballots at will.
So what this means is these are voters with no record, perhaps no existence, and their vote cannot be subject to a recount because the county is shielded from the process. In other words, the way Michigan is set up, it is completely possible to cast fraudulent ballots with no record to real people and you cannot even recount the occurrence because the precinct is labeled as "unbalanced.
According to The Detroit News, this isn't just a problem for absentee ballot counting, in fact, since 46% of all precincts investigated by the canvassers had this issue, this could mean the entire election could be put into question.
The Detroit News writes:
Without an explanation from Detroit election workers for the mismatches, the Wayne County Board of Canvassers requested this week for Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson's office to examine the "training and processes" used in Detroit's Aug. 4 primary, which one official described as a "perfect storm" of challenges. The board is charged with certifying election results.
In 46% of all Detroit's precincts — absentee and Election Day — vote counts were out of balance, according to information presented Tuesday to the Wayne County Board of Canvassers. Specifically, the number of ballots tracked in precinct poll books did not match the number of ballots counted.
The situation could amplify the spotlight on absentee ballots in Michigan ahead of an election for which record levels of mail-in voting are expected and President Donald Trump is already raising concerns about how votes will be handled.
The document in question comes from minutes of an official meeting on August 18, 2020, where the results were presented. Hundreds of counties were off by multiple votes, but only a small number of them could actually explain why they were off. The gross majority of them gave NO EXPLANATION.
These counties' voter records need to be rectified or else it is difficult to secure an accurate recount, let alone an accurate election vote. As the document said itself on page 2:
He reported on the difficulties staff encountered while trying to canvass the City of Detroit absentee precincts. He indicated that aside from receiving the poll books on the first Friday and Saturday after the canvass began, the list of voters received made it difficult to determine how many voters actually returned their ballot. He reported that the City of Detroit used the QVF printed list of voters but there was also a handwritten list of voters, which is common to use both, but the two lists combined put the precincts severely out of balance.
HELP STOP THE SPREAD OF FAKE NEWS!
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