The Secretary of state refuses to testify in a Michigan state congressional investigation into election fraud

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson leaves the building after the electoral College vote in Lansing, Michigan, on December 14, 2020.

Michigan’s top election official declined on Tuesday to testify before the state legislature in an investigation into alleged election irregularities.

Michigan’s secretary of state Joe celine Benson (Jocelyn Benson) to state senator Matt Hall (Matt Hall) wrote: “I know the committee held a hearing, I worry about elections’ it and you find out the truth ‘desire, on the other hand, the hearing is expanding has been debunked conspiracy theories and the lack of basic management knowledge failure of previous election, do damage to the election integrity, hurt our democracy.”

Benson quoted former Attorney General William Barr as saying earlier this month that investigators had found “no fraud that could have affected the scale of the outcome of the election.” And he pointed to a statement signed by Chris Krebs, the former head of the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Division, calling the election “the most secure in The history of the United States.”

But both have left office in the wake of election fraud.

Trump (trump) President first announced on November 17th relieved from his position as Krebs, and said, “the safest election” Krebs signed statement is very unreliable, the election is a large number of malpractice and fraud, including voting, observers are not permitted to enter the dead place, the “failure” voting machines causes to trump the turned to Joe biden votes and vote for the future.

Trump then announced on December 14 that Attorney General Barr would step down on December 23 and that the Justice Department would continue its investigation into election fraud.

The tweet was accompanied by Barr’s resignation letter, which read: “I appreciate the opportunity this afternoon to update you (the President) on the Justice Department’s latest review of voter fraud allegations in the 2020 election and how the Justice Department is continuing to pursue these allegations.”

“At a time when the country is so deeply divided, all levels of government — all institutions acting within their purview — have a responsibility to do everything they can to ensure the integrity of the elections and to promote public confidence in the results,” Mr Barr said.

But Michigan’s secretary of state is still in her letter to refuse to testify emphasizes the two officials, said “given the federal level of these findings, combined with elected officials and the state of the two parties the judge and judge the fact of fraud charges, I think the committee has the responsibility to clearly and openly declared, the election result to the will of the voters in Michigan accurately reflect.”

Ms. Benson initially said she would testify, but declined to answer questions about her work when it came time to do so, said Ms. Hall, chairwoman of the house oversight committee, in response. “Benson’s flip shows that she would rather hide under a rock than help the people of Michigan build trust in the state’s election process,” he said.

“Legislators have heard these concerns and are taking action to address them,” Hall said. But this requires a collaborative effort to provide trust. The House and Senate Oversight committees have heard testimony from county clerks from both parties about what they have seen and what they can do to improve the State’s electoral system in the future — conversations and ideas that have been very constructive and helpful.”

At a three-hour hearing before the Michigan Senate Oversight committee, Dominion Chief Executive John Poulos defended his products, saying the system does not involve swapping or deleting ballots, but he acknowledged that some machines are connected to the Internet. Pross’s speech soon provoked a debate on both sides.

According to the Michigan State Board of Elections, voting machines cannot be connected to the Internet during the counting period. But after the votes are counted, some jurisdictions connect machines to the Internet to send unofficial results to county clerks.

In early December, Michigan lawmakers held two public hearings on election fraud to hear from the president’s lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, election observers and cybersecurity experts, among others. The latest hearing comes one day after the public Dominion Machine Audit report is due in the state.

The Dominion’s voting system was deliberately and purposefully designed with errors of its own to create systematic fraud to influence election results, according to the forensic audit report.