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You can believe or disbelieve in 2020 election fraud; that is your American right. However, the question is: Is it possible that it really occurred in some way, shape, or form? Whether fraud contributed to the win or loss of your favorite candidate’s election is secondary compared to whether or not any form of corruption occurred in the national election.
When 16 of the largest and most influential states don’t even require identification verification when one votes (California, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Vermont, and Washington, D.C.!), are we really that naïve to think “identity theft” (or forging votes) doesn’t occur with ballots?
When a couple dozen other states just “request” and not “require” some form of official identification to vote, do we not think corrupt forms of “people proxy voting” occur, especially when so much is on the line with presidential elections?
When the Public Interest Legal Foundation (PILF) published an official report based upon solid evidence that “tens of thousands of cases of possible voter fraud” occurred (including ID theft and dead people voting), shouldn’t our representatives seek election reform that at very least minimizes cheating?
For example, the PILF discovered errors in elections dating back to the 2016 presidential election:
- 349,773 potentially deceased voting registrants across 41 states; Michigan, Florida, New York, Texas and California account for roughly 51% of national dead registrants.
- 43,760 likely duplicate registrants appear to have cast second votes in 2016 from the same address.
- 37,889 likely duplicate registrants appear to have cast second votes in 2018 from the same address. Thousands of these apparent double votes were exclusively mail ballots.
- 8,360 – number of registrants apparently registered in two states and credited for voting in both states in 2018.
- 5,500 – number of apparently duplicate registrants credited for voting twice in the same state from two different addresses in 2018.
- 34,000 – number of registrants credited for voting from apparently non-residential addresses in 2018.
This kind of data is why the Heritage Foundation concluded, “The threat of vote fraud is real – and it could make a difference in a close election.” Like 2024?