- Thread starter
- #681
Look, I realize you are panicking and completely losing your shit over the realization that your sick party of corruption, totalitarianism, and evil is going to really struggle to win elections, but facts matter.Since there is not one reason in the world to be writing endless laws that you say are protecting the vote and since there is absolutely no reason to do that…
Georgia held their primary election this Tuesday while Pennsylvania held theirs over a week and a half ago.
These two elections completely busted the left’s myth of describing election integrity as “voter suppression.”:
Georgia:
- Last year Governor Kemp signed into law a sweeping election integrity bill. It standardized early voting while prohibiting private funding (or “ZuckBucks”) and also secured drop-boxes and banned ballot trafficking/harvesting.
- Nearly the entire liberal media and Democrat politicians decried the bill as “voter suppression,” and Biden even called it “Jim Crow in the 21st Century.”
- The MLB moved their All-Star game out of Atlanta, and other corporations like Coca-Cola and Delta embarrassed themselves by blindly parroting Democrat talking points.
- This week, the Georgia primary elections showed the real effect of the new law: We saw record turnout with nearly 1.9 million Georgians voting (up 60% from 2018).
- There were virtually no lines, unlike in the 2020 election, and Georgians can thank the new law for cleaning up the process.
- After the disastrous 2020 election in Pennsylvania, the Republican-led legislature passed a sensible bill to clean up the mail-in process, but liberal Governor Tom Wolf vetoed the bill.
- Now, Pennsylvanians are left wondering who their Republican nominee for Senate will be. It’s been nearly two weeks since the election, and voters still don’t have an answer.
- The same issues that plagued the 2020 election –– misprinted and undated mail-in ballots –– are also plaguing this primary election.
- Had Governor Wolf signed into law some common-sense election integrity reforms, this disaster of a process could have easily been avoided.