Republicans are citing numerous problems at polling sites in Tuesday's special election in Pennsylvania, which remains too close to officially call but appears to be trending toward an extremely narrow victory for Democrat Conor Lamb.
Lamb currently leads Republican Rick Saccone by just 627 votes and there are still absentee and provisional ballots that have not been tabulated, but Republicans are already preparing for the likely recount and even a possible lawsuit regarding issues at polling sites, according to a Republican source familiar with the deliberations.
"We’re actively investigating three instances and likely to file court action on them," the source said.
Among the listed concerns are "mis-calibrated" voting machines in Allegheny County, the only county of four in the district that went for Lamb, according to the source, who said there have been many reports of voters who intended to vote for Saccone ending up casting a ballot for Lamb.
Furthermore, Republicans say their attorneys were ejected from polling sites as the absentee ballots were still being counted..
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How many Head stones in the mix ????
ReplyDeleteSounds just like the Salisbury Elections and Jim Ireton's win over Joe Albero.
ReplyDeleteThis is exactly how Obama won in 2012. Think about it, the major U.S. news papers endorsed Mitt Romney in 2012 and Obama won. That has never happened in U.S. history. Same thing happening in 2016 with the DNC and Hillary's voting. Illegals and Convicts voting illegally.
I bet that is how Roy Moore lost.
If we don't investigate all these cases of voter fraud and do something about it now, Trump will lose the election in 2020.
Although this is a special election in Pa. this is indicative of the #2018Midterms.
Voter ID's NOW!