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A federal court in the Northern District of Georgia today affirmed that citizens have the right to lawfully petition their government in support of election integrity without fear of persecution or prosecution.
In a resounding vindication, TTV successfully defended its actions of December 2020, aiding Georgia citizens in filing elector challenges based on data showing over 364,000 voters appeared to be ineligible to vote due to change in residency.
This victory is a testament to every American's constitutional right to free speech and the importance of actively participating in the electoral process.
TextFor the first time, one can identify someone voting from a temporary address – like a church, RV Park, hotel or shelter – who has been having a ballot cast in their name for a decade.
originally posted by: Boomer1947
a reply to: WingDingLuey
Well, it's definitely a good idea that citizens have the right to lawfully petition the government.
Now, how many fraudulent votes were found as a result of the petitioning?
originally posted by: Boomer1947
a reply to: WingDingLuey
Well, it's definitely a good idea that citizens have the right to lawfully petition the government.
Now, how many fraudulent votes were found as a result of the petitioning?
Georgia Chairman of the Republican Party David Shafer later revealed that Raffensperger and Fuchs lied to the Washington Post about Trump, demanding that they “find the fraud.” Then, after they leaked their version of the story to the Washington Post, they deleted the audio of the call. The audio file was later found in the laptop’s “trash” folder.
originally posted by: DBCowboy
a reply to: WingDingLuey
That's good, not saying it isn't.
But too many places have destroyed election records (too many to list, I Googled it) to ever prove cheating that happened.