easyt65
Diamond Member
- Aug 4, 2015
- 90,307
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...due to precedence and potential for voter fraud and corruption.
Instead of making elections safer and re-instilling confidence in the legal status, integrity, and reliability of US elections, the PA USSC decided to go the other way and set up a potential repeat of the last election controversy.
"In the two years since, county and state administrators and election experts have mostly agreed on the best ways to make sure those problems don’t happen again. Two of the most common solutions are changing state law to give counties more time to tabulate ballots, and to clarify exactly which ballots should and shouldn’t be counted.
Despite the state legislature spending a lot of time in the past two years discussing elections, however, those things haven’t happened....
the outcome is going to be predictable: another cycle of delays and baseless fraud claims."
“Just as I knew it was coming in 2020, we’re going to see it again,” he said. “The legislature knows it, and they’re not doing a damn thing to fix it.”
That's called 'intentional', no desire to change because you liked the results you got last time doing it.
Why fix what ain't broke ... for YOUR side.
Instead of making elections safer and re-instilling confidence in the legal status, integrity, and reliability of US elections, the PA USSC decided to go the other way and set up a potential repeat of the last election controversy.
Pennsylvania Supreme Court upholds state’s mail-in voting law
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has upheld a state law that expanded mail-in voting, paving the way for the practice to be used in this year's midterm elections.
www.foxnews.com
"In the two years since, county and state administrators and election experts have mostly agreed on the best ways to make sure those problems don’t happen again. Two of the most common solutions are changing state law to give counties more time to tabulate ballots, and to clarify exactly which ballots should and shouldn’t be counted.
Despite the state legislature spending a lot of time in the past two years discussing elections, however, those things haven’t happened....
the outcome is going to be predictable: another cycle of delays and baseless fraud claims."
“Just as I knew it was coming in 2020, we’re going to see it again,” he said. “The legislature knows it, and they’re not doing a damn thing to fix it.”
Unresolved issues have Pa. election experts planning for a rough 2022 midterm
Three Pa. counties still haven’t certified their May primary balloting, and a cascade of lawsuits create uncertainty over how 2022 votes will be counted.
whyy.org
That's called 'intentional', no desire to change because you liked the results you got last time doing it.
Why fix what ain't broke ... for YOUR side.