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Kansas Secretary of State Scott Schwab said Monday the recount of the landslide abortion vote, which reaffirmed the election outcome, shows no major fraud exists in the state’s elections.
The recount, which involved examining nearly 60% of the ballots cast, “proves once and for all that there is no systemic election fraud in our state’s election process,” Schwab, an Olathe Republican, said in a statement.
“Kansans should be confident that these results put to rest the unfounded claims of election fraud in our state and know that our elections are secure and that their vote counted,” Schwab said.
The recount of Kansas’ 59% to 41% rejection of an amendment that would have removed abortion rights from the state constitution took place in nine counties, including Sedgwick and Johnson. Schwab noted that the recount altered the results by less than 2/100ths of one percentage point — an infinitesimal fraction of the overall vote that included ballots from more than 922,000 Kansans.
Abortion vote recount proves no fraud in Kansas elections, state's top election official says | The Kansas City Star
Kansas Secretary of State Scott Schwab said Monday the recount of the landslide abortion vote, which reaffirmed the election outcome, shows no major fraud exists in the state’s elections. The recount, which involved examining nearly 60% of the ballots cast, “proves once and for all that there is...
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The recount, which involved examining nearly 60% of the ballots cast, “proves once and for all that there is no systemic election fraud in our state’s election process,” Schwab, an Olathe Republican, said in a statement.
“Kansans should be confident that these results put to rest the unfounded claims of election fraud in our state and know that our elections are secure and that their vote counted,” Schwab said.
The recount of Kansas’ 59% to 41% rejection of an amendment that would have removed abortion rights from the state constitution took place in nine counties, including Sedgwick and Johnson. Schwab noted that the recount altered the results by less than 2/100ths of one percentage point — an infinitesimal fraction of the overall vote that included ballots from more than 922,000 Kansans.
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