The voters of Wyoming have spoken. Liz is gone. She lost in a landslide to a Trump endorsed candidate. The voters don't care about 1/6 .
and most of her so called supporters were democrats that had no intention on voting for her in the general
The voters of Wyoming have spoken. Liz is gone. She lost in a landslide to a Trump endorsed candidate. The voters don't care about 1/6 .
Flash you sound reasonable. Are you aware of how geolocation works?
this is why you people are losing.
you act smarter than everyone but are dumber than fuck.
are drop boxes secure?
Translation: you blacks, Jews and other brown people who have stolen our White America from us.
I guess it depends on the location of any particular drop box.
When there was a question we were supposed to try to determine the voter's intent if possible
I guess it depends on the location of any particular drop box.
so a drop box in a good location verifies the i.d. of the dropper?
i don't think so, dummy.
why are you so fucking wilfully stupid?
how about the ones on street corners open all night long with no observers or cameras?......
only a racist would read it that way.
good for you, racist.
Not sure about the Federal laws or all 50 states, but in both Florida and Texas, I've used mail-in ballots for years. After registering in person, I left a copy of my signature. Upon voting, my signature was matched on the ballot to my registration information. Same thing as voting in person except it's not every time I vote.Obviously less secure but also much less common. What would a person do in such a situation if he wanted to cheat?
You obviously cannot print your own ballots and deposit them. Most ballots have security measures and you couldn't have more ballots than registered voters. How does cheating occur in a less secure location?
Not sure about the Federal laws or all 50 states, but in both Florida and Texas, I've used mail-in ballots for years. After registering in person, I left a copy of my signature. Upon voting, my signature was matched on the ballot to my registration information. Same thing as voting in person except it's not every time I vote.
Since the is no indication of election altering fraud in any national elections, it causes me to question the motives of the spendthrift idiots in charge of the RNC who want states to go through a massive cost effort for no required reason.
If you voted by mail in the 2022 primary you had to include an identification number on your ballot:
Texas Driver’s License, Texas Personal Identification Number or Election Identification Certificate Number issued by the Texas Department of Public Safety; or If you don't have one of those, the last 4 digits of your Social Security Number
This number was a new requirement which many did not include and their ballot was disqualified.
"The votes of more than 24,000 Texans who tried to cast ballots by mail were thrown out in the March primary — a dramatic increase in rejected ballots in the first election held under a new Republican voting law. Roughly 12.4% of mail-in ballots returned to the state’s 254 counties were not counted, according to figures released Wednesday by the Texas secretary of state. Just over 3 million people voted overall in the low-turnout primary.
Of 24,636 rejected mail-in ballots, 14,281 belonged to voters attempting to participate in the Democratic primary, and 10,355 belonged to voters in the Republican primary. But the rejection rate by party was fairly aligned; 12.9% of Democratic ballots were rejected and 11.8% of Republican ballots were rejected."
More than 12% of Texas mail-in ballots rejected in March primary | The Texas Tribune
Obviously less secure but also much less common. What would a person do in such a situation if he wanted to cheat?
You obviously cannot print your own ballots and deposit them. Most ballots have security measures and you couldn't have more ballots than registered voters. How does cheating occur in a less secure location?
obviously what a person could do is what the videos you pretend aren't real show people doing......dumping armfuls of ballots into the boxes in the middle of the night....
You can't see squat in those videos. How do you know they are real ballots and what does it matter if it is night or day?
You see nothing that is illegal. If they are not "real" ballots it will be caught when scanned.
What do you think was occurring in those videos? Where did people get those handfuls of ballots? You are seeing what you want to see. The geotracking portion of that documentary was a joke.
So you think they are putting fake ballots in the drop box? Now that is a real problem. The movie explains where they got the ballots. They picked them up at any one of 5 different very liberal NGOs (BLM was one of them). The movie had a couple of whistleblowers who said they picked up ballots from there and were paid for each ballot they deposited in drop boxes. They followed them to the NGOs and to several different dropboxes using geolocation. Geolocation was used to identify the J/6 rioters and no one doubts its accuracy there.
Proving Republicans can read better than Democrats.If you voted by mail in the 2022 primary you had to include an identification number on your ballot:
Texas Driver’s License, Texas Personal Identification Number or Election Identification Certificate Number issued by the Texas Department of Public Safety; or If you don't have one of those, the last 4 digits of your Social Security Number
This number was a new requirement which many did not include and their ballot was disqualified.
"The votes of more than 24,000 Texans who tried to cast ballots by mail were thrown out in the March primary — a dramatic increase in rejected ballots in the first election held under a new Republican voting law. Roughly 12.4% of mail-in ballots returned to the state’s 254 counties were not counted, according to figures released Wednesday by the Texas secretary of state. Just over 3 million people voted overall in the low-turnout primary.
Of 24,636 rejected mail-in ballots, 14,281 belonged to voters attempting to participate in the Democratic primary, and 10,355 belonged to voters in the Republican primary. But the rejection rate by party was fairly aligned; 12.9% of Democratic ballots were rejected and 11.8% of Republican ballots were rejected."
More than 12% of Texas mail-in ballots rejected in March primary | The Texas Tribune