U.S. Senators angrily rebuke ABC reporters that the evidence of election fraud is conclusive

In an interview with ABC host George Stephanopoulos on Sunday morning (Jan. 24), Kentucky U.S. Senator Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) denounced his reckless disregard for the fact that there is fraud in the 2020 presidential election. He also said he will work to amend the relevant laws to protect the integrity of the election and stop election fraud.

Stephanopoulos asked Paul directly whether he would accept the “fact” that the election was not stolen. In response, Paul cited a number of documented examples of election irregularities, including people voting twice, counting dead votes, and illegal alien votes, among others. However, Stephanopoulos completely ignored Paul’s examples, again asking Paul to admit that “this election was not stolen” and saying that Trump and his supporters “lied big Time” about the issue.

The comment angered Paul, who interrupted Stephanopoulos and said angrily, “A liberal like you, if you made a mistake, you would immediately say it was all a lie, not that everything has to be looked at from both sides.”

Paul added that if he had said once upon a time that he thought there was election fraud, then Stephanopoulos as a member of the media would have gone and interviewed people who thought there was no fraud. “But now you’re wading yourself into it and making a direct and absolute judgment that everything I say is a lie …… You say there is no fraud, but that is not the case, all fraud has been investigated!”

Paul further gives the example, “In Wisconsin, thousands of absentee ballots have only names on them, no addresses. Once upon a time, these ballots were meant to be thrown away, not this time. They found an excuse to say, ‘Oh, it’s this Epidemic that makes people forget what their address is.’ So they changed the law after the fact. But it was wrong and unconstitutional to do that.” “In some states, laws are changed by the secretary of state, not the state legislature. I think those are clearly unconstitutional, and I think people still have the opportunity to appeal them to the Supreme Court.”

Paul said he plans to spend the next two years traveling to each state to address these issues, and that he will not be intimidated by the liberals in the media. He believes the United States should come together as a free country to have an open debate on the issue. “People should be open to the fairness of elections and voter fraud, and that should be debated and investigated.”

He called on each state’s legislature to amend relevant election laws to protect the integrity of elections. “If we want to increase Americans’ confidence in elections, 75 percent of Republicans agree with me that we really need to confront the integrity of elections.”