Trump: Joe State election procedures are unconstitutional Senate runoffs are invalid

President Trump says the Joe State U.S. Senate runoff election is invalid and illegal.

President Trump says Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s relaxation of the state’s absentee ballot signature verification regulations is unconstitutional and makes the state’s Nov. 3 election and Jan. 5 Senate runoff “illegal and invalid.

On Friday (Jan. 1), Trump sent three tweets in a row referring to a “Consent Decree” signed by Laffensperger and state Democrats last March that changed Joe State’s absentee voting procedures.

Trump wrote, “There is massive corruption in the 2020 election that (involves) far more votes than we need to win all the swing states (just three of them would be enough). But before we get to that, it’s important to note that the massive and hasty changes to voting procedures, rules and regulations prior to the election were not made by the state legislature. Therefore, the entire state election was illegal or unconstitutional.”

Trump went on to say, “In addition, Joe State’s consent decree is unconstitutional, so that state’s 2020 presidential election is also illegal and invalid, and that includes the two rounds of senatorial runoffs currently (taking place). And in Wisconsin, voters (absentee ballots) are not required to apply, which also makes the election invalid. All this, and not even discussing the millions of fraudulent votes that have been cast or tampered with!”

On Jan. 5, incumbent Republican Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler will run against Democratic challengers Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock. on Jan. 4, both Trump and popular party presidential candidate Joe Biden ( Joe Biden) will both travel to Joe State to campaign.

On Dec. 18 of last year, prominent U.S. attorney Lin Wood filed a lawsuit against Joe’s Secretary of State Ruffinsperger, alleging that the state’s administration of the U.S. Senate runoff violated state election laws and the U.S. Constitution.

He called on the local court to order election officials to conduct voter signatures and identification in accordance with state law, not the directives of election officials. The lawsuit also challenges election procedures regarding how, when and where absentee ballots are delivered and opened.

The lawsuit reads, “Because Defendants violated the U.S. Constitution and the Joe State Legislature’s election plan, the runoff election is being, and will be, conducted in an unconstitutional manner and must be corrected in a constitutional manner.”

In addition, the security of the voting system for the Joe State Senate runoff election has been questioned.

On Wednesday (Dec. 30), cyber expert and inventor Jovan Hutton Pulitzer told senators at an election and voter fraud hearing before the Georgia Senate Judiciary Subcommittee that his team of hackers managed to gain access to the voting system for the Senate runoff, as evidenced by records; the voting machines were connected to the Internet and two-way communication occurred in real time.

On Thursday, Pulitzer released a live video further alleging that “cheap Chinese-made smart televisions with WiFi capability were basically drawing all the portable data” next to the voting machines and appeared to be communicating with the Chinese in both directions.