Attorney Sidney Powell, who had announced that the lawsuit would be filed on Wednesday, has filed over 100 pages of pleadings in the state court, as expected. In the brief, Powell says there is “ample evidence” that election fraud is real and widespread.
At the same time, the Amistad Project, a national conservative legal group of the Thomas More Society, also filed a lawsuit in the state, arguing that up to 200,000 irregular votes may have been cast in the state, enough to reverse the election results.
Currently, the Trump team has legal challenges in Pennsylvania, Georgia, Wisconsin, Arizona, Michigan, and Nevada, with a total of nine pending cases in Pennsylvania alone. Rudy Giuliani, an attorney for the Trump campaign, advised Pennsylvania’s Republican state senators that they have the right and the responsibility to vote for the state’s electors.
The Pennsylvania Senate held a public hearing on election fraud in Gettysburg, where President Trump participated by phone, citing three examples of threats to his supporters and calling for encouragement to his supporters not to be “intimidated” by Democrats and others who would dissuade them from exposing election fraud and irregularities. “. He also took to social media to say that there is still a long way to go in 2020 and that he believes he can still win in the end.
The following are live updates on the status of the U.S. election.
Linwood Jo filed emergency motion, 11th Circuit granted
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit granted an emergency motion by attorney Lin Wood on Wednesday (Nov. 25).
In the emergency motion, Lin Wood asked the appeals court for emergency review of a lower court ruling that rejected his efforts to delay certification of his vote in Georgia.
The court said Linwood must show certain jurisdictional issues before the appeal can proceed. Wood announced on Twitter, “Thanksgiving Eve news! The Eleventh Circuit granted my emergency proposal to expedite review of litigation challenging the validity of Joe’s election process.”
Twitter account of legislator who initiated Pennsylvania hearings blocked
On Wednesday afternoon (November 25), the Pennsylvania Senate held a hearing on the election in Gettysburg, Pa. The Twitter account of State Republican Senator Doug Mastriano, who initiated the hearing, was blocked for the day.
Mastriano’s personal account was available until Wednesday afternoon. Now, the page shows the account has been suspended. “Twitter suspends accounts that violate Twitter rules.” The tech giant wrote so on the blocked account page.
In recent months, Twitter has stepped up its “censorship” of users who support Trump. U.S. lawmakers are considering an amendment to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act that would change the way tech companies are generally immune from liability lawsuits.
Giuliani: Pennsylvania commits perjury if it certifies results
After Wednesday’s hearing in Pennsylvania, Rudy Giuliani, a lawyer for the Trump team and former New York mayor, said in an interview on Fox Business Network’s Lou Dobbs Tonight, “I think it went very well. , because it’s the first time we’ve had a chance to present evidence.”
He said many people, including judges, have been trying to suppress Trump’s side. The mail-in ballots were even more problematic. In Pennsylvania, 1.8 million ballots were mailed, but 2.5 million were returned.
“Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 of the Constitution gives the legislature the power to determine how the electors are selected. Considering that Pennsylvania’s vote count was bogus, they could not have certified it. If they did certify it, they would be guilty of perjury.” Giuliani added, “I think we’ve convinced them that in Pennsylvania alone, (Trump’s) votes were undercounted by about 600,000 to 700,000.”
Ex-Army Colonel: 1.2 million votes in Pennsylvania may have been altered
On November 25, retired U.S. Army Colonel Phil Waldron appeared as a witness at a general election hearing before the Pennsylvania Senate.
Waldron stated that as many as 1.2 million votes in Pennsylvania may have been altered or fraudulently cast; after the election, 2.5 million pieces of data disappeared from the Pennsylvania Secretary of State’s government website. He believes the voting systems in both Pennsylvania and the United States have been manipulated.
Waldron has served in the Army for over 30 years and is currently the founder and CEO of a combat and defense training company. He reveals that his team has been studying the issue of voting machine manipulation for two years, starting in August of this year with a special study of voting systems in U.S. elections.
Trump’s Pennsylvania Public Hearing Speech: Democrats’ Fraud Exposed
On Wednesday (November 25), the Pennsylvania Senate held a public hearing on election fraud in Gettysburg, where Trump participated in the meeting by phone and spoke for nearly 10 minutes.
The “accidental” speech of Trump was warmly responded by the people at the scene, the scene coincidentally sounded “Trump, Trump” rally slogan, the people stood up to applaud for Trump.
“The Democrats lost this election, they cheated. It was a fraudulent election. They flooded the polls.” Kawakami said, “They’re crazy because we got more votes than they thought we would. They stepped on the wrong gas pedal and got caught, just like I caught them spying on my campaign team (referring to 2016).”
Poll: Nearly 80% of Pro-Cheon voters agree that the election was stolen
The U.S. magazine Politico recently conducted a “2020 Voter Priorities Survey” and concluded that 79% of voters in favor of Chuan believe that fraudulent ballots stole the election, while only 21% believe the election results are valid. The poll was conducted online with 1,500 voters between November 10 and 19. The margin of error is plus or minus 2.5 percent.
According to the survey, nearly two-thirds of voters do not accept the results of the election, the level of distrust of the election results is at a record high; 83% of voters who support Trump believe that the media is the enemy of the people; 72% of Biden voters believe that the media plays an important role.
Trump retweeted the poll results on Tuesday (Nov. 24), writing, “They (voters) are 100% right and we are fighting hard. Our massive lawsuit detailing all of the vote fraud and more is complete and will be soon. This is a rigged election!”
Georgia files 100-page brief Powell: has “preponderance of the evidence”
Sidney Powell, a Texas attorney and ally of President Trump, filed her petition to uncover 2020 election fraud in Georgia state court on Wednesday (Nov. 25) at 10:30 p.m. ET, as scheduled.
She tweeted on social media, “My friend, you’ve got it wrong. Go read the Georgia lawsuit and addendum we filed tonight. The vast majority of inmates in U.S. prisons have less alleged evidence than we have in this complaint.”
Powell’s brief states that as a civil action, as the Georgia Supreme Court has made clear, the plaintiff’s burden of proof is to present “a preponderance of the evidence,” as demonstrated by “the mathematical improbability found by actual witnesses to specific events, multiple expert witnesses, and the Georgia 2020 presidential election.
The complaint states: “According to the expert report, the same pattern of election fraud and voter fraud occurred in all of the swing states, with the exception of Michigan, Pennsylvania, Arizona, and Wisconsin, where the situation was slightly different. At least 35,000 ballots were illegally added to Mr. Biden’s tally.”
The Northern District of Georgia is expected to hear the case.
200,000 ballots in Georgia suspected of irregularities, law group files lawsuit
A U.S. conservative legal organization filed a lawsuit Wednesday (Nov. 25) local time, arguing that more than 200,000 ballots may have been illegally counted or improperly uncounted in Georgia, a number that would be enough to flip the outcome of the state’s election.
The legal challenge was brought by the Amistad Project, a national conservative group called the Thomas More Society.
In its complaint, the project says government data shows that “well over 100,000 illegal ballots in Georgia were improperly counted and tens of thousands of legal ballots were not counted.
Amistad Project director Phill Kline said in a press release that the alleged ballot errors “undermine the integrity of the presidential election.
The Amistad Project says that “systematic failures by state and local election officials” resulted from receiving large amounts of money from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.
The project questions the large amounts of money that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg donates to local election offices through a leftist organization called the Centers for Tech and Civic Life.
According to data provided by Ballotpedia, most of these private donations have gone to key swing state districts. As a result, the legality of these private grants has been questioned.
Responding to running again after four years Trump: this year’s isn’t over yet
President Trump, responding to poll respondents who said they want him to run for president in 2024, said this year isn’t over.
In a new Morning Consult/Politico poll, a majority of Republican respondents said they would vote for Trump if he ran for president in four years.
Trump shared a social media post about the poll, writing, “But 2020 is a long way off!”
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has declared victory in the Nov. 3 election, but Trump is challenging the results in a number of key states and insists he still has a chance to win the election.
He said, “This is an election we won handily. We won a lot.”
Giuliani: Pennsylvania Legislature has a responsibility to elect its own electors
On Wednesday (November 25), Trump campaign attorney Rudy Giuliani advised Pennsylvania’s Republican state senators that they have the power and responsibility to vote for the state’s electors. He again emphasized that Democrats have committed fraud in this election.
On Wednesday, the Republican-controlled Pennsylvania Senate Majority Policy Committee held a hearing in Gettysburg where Giuliani said that the U.S. Constitution gives state legislators the power to abolish state electors and send their own electors to the Electoral College.
Giuliani cited the Constitution’s provision that elections “are not governed by the governor or the Board of Elections”. He told Pennsylvania’s Republican senators, “It’s your power …… and your responsibility.”
Although essentially all state legislatures now choose to appoint electors based on the state’s referendum, the U.S. Constitution does not require that electors be appointed by referendum, but rather gives each state’s legislature the power to choose.
Current Pennsylvania figures show Biden leading Trump by about 80,000 votes, but Pennsylvania is embroiled in various allegations of election fraud, and the Trump campaign has filed several lawsuits.
Giuliani said President Trump’s campaign has filed a lawsuit in hopes of overturning 672,000 votes and thereby flipping the state’s election results. The Trump campaign filed the lawsuits because Democratic officials in Philadelphia and other areas won’t allow Republican scrutineers to check the envelopes (signatures) of mailed ballots.
Colorado Republican Party Calls for Review of Dominion Voting System
Republicans in Jefferson County, Colorado, have called for an audit of the 2018 and 2020 elections and expressed concerns about the security of the Dominion software and technology used in the county and the state’s other 61 counties. Republicans in the county have also called for an examination of the source code of the Dominion voting system.
In the past few weeks, the Dominion voting system has been accused of diverting votes from Trump to Biden, the Democratic candidate.
In a letter to George Stern, the county clerk and recorder, Jefferson County Republicans requested an audit of the 2018 midterm elections and the Nov. 3, 2020, election to determine if there were any irregularities and to review Dominion’s software code.
Unusually high voter turnout in some Wisconsin precincts
The city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Milwaukee) experienced an anomaly in this year’s general election, with the city’s total voting population dropping by 13,000, while some precincts saw an unusual spike in voter turnout.
Milwaukee has more than 300 precincts, with 2010 population data showing nearly 600,000 residents.
This year, five precincts in Milwaukee saw a 31% to 44% increase in voter turnout. One precinct had 105% of the eligible voters. Four other precincts had more than 92% of the eligible voters.
Precinct 235 recorded 1,768 ballots, but only 1,680 eligible voters in the precinct.
While this does not exclude a factor of population growth in recent years, one of the most commonly understood phenomena is that people who have moved are still on Wisconsin’s voter rolls.
Collin Roth, a spokesman for the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty, told The Epoch Times that the institute filed a lawsuit later this year alleging that the Wisconsin Board of Elections violated the law by not disenrolling voters who had moved. But the case is pending before the Nov. 3 voting date and is currently pending before the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
The Wisconsin Board of Elections found that 230,000 voters may have moved in 2019 and then notified them to confirm their registration status. However, more than 200,000 people did not respond in the following 30 days.
Under state law, the Wisconsin Board of Elections is supposed to disqualify people who don’t respond in 30 days from registering. But in mid-2020, the Wisconsin Board of Elections decided not to proceed with the disenrollment.
Wisconsin is one of the key swing states in which Team Trump is challenging the election results. According to unofficial data, Democratic candidate Biden currently has a slight lead of 20,000 votes for the time being.
Supporters Fighting Fraud Threatened Trump: Don’t Be Intimidated
The Pennsylvania Senate held a public hearing on election fraud in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, with President Trump joining the meeting by phone. The President encourages his supporters not to be “Intimidated” (intimidated) by Democrats and others discouraging them from exposing election fraud and irregularities.
Trump referred to Republican poll watchers in Pennsylvania who were denied entry by local election officials; even after being allowed into the counting room with a court order, they had to supervise the counting from a distance as if they were watching a baseball game.
He said, “If you’re a Republican scrutineer, you’re treated like a dog, whereas Democrats don’t have that problem…”.
Trump said, “Our (Republican) ticket inspectors are being thrown out of the building… Don’t be intimidated by these people (leftist Democrats).” He said that this was a crude tactic, that this is what happened in Pennsylvania, that this is not what should happen in the United States of America, and “I think everybody understands why they are here and why you are doing everything you can about it.”
Trump cited three examples of threats to his support: an attorney representing Trump in a Pennsylvania judicial proceeding is now being protected; the wife and children of a Michigan Board of Canvassers member have been threatened; and members of the Detroit Board of Elections have also expressed threats.
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