President Trump’s endorsement is the single most powerful force in the universe of American politics. President Trump is running the table on the GOP establishment in the 2022 races. His record stands at 92-7 at the moment.
Brian Kemp was getting 52% of the votes and his main challenger, David Perdue, was getting 38% of the votes just before the race.
On Primary Day in Georgia, Kemp gets 74% and Perdue gets 22%. Nobody in any election in America gets 74% of the votes. Ever. It doesn’t happen.
Trump-endorsed candidate Patrick Witt lost to a nobody named John King — and John King got 70% of the votes!
Now take a look at Patrick Witt’s numbers county by county: he got the same percentage of votes in 122 out of 159 counties in Georgia.
A month ago, the University of Georgia conducted a poll of Georgia’s Republican voters found very different results that directly contradict these funny numbers. In fact, the University of Georgia was predicting that Trump-endorsed candidates were going to win almost everything — which is happening in every other state in the country right now.
VOTER GA held a press conference on Monday to announce that 102 Georgia counties could not produce their drop box surveillance videos for the stolen 2020 election.
Let me repeat that number: 102 Georgia counties.
Apparently, 72 counties were forced to admit that all those videos had been destroyed.
It's been proven in many races across the country, at every level, but nobody every does much about it. A few states make it more difficult than other states, and sometimes people do go to prison for it. The 2020 presidential election was over the top though. But so many people wanted Trump out of office, people with institutional power, that they let them get away with the steal.
You had a nice window of fair (enough) elections with the reforms of the 1960s, and with punch card systems, before electronic voting machines were put into place after the 2000 elections.
Best parts:
President Trump’s endorsement is the single most powerful force in the universe of American politics. President Trump is running the table on the GOP establishment in the 2022 races. His record stands at 92-7 at the moment.
Brian Kemp was getting 52% of the votes and his main challenger, David Perdue, was getting 38% of the votes just before the race.
On Primary Day in Georgia, Kemp gets 74% and Perdue gets 22%. Nobody in any election in America gets 74% of the votes. Ever. It doesn’t happen.
Trump-endorsed candidate Patrick Witt lost to a nobody named John King — and John King got 70% of the votes!
Now take a look at Patrick Witt’s numbers county by county: he got the same percentage of votes in 122 out of 159 counties in Georgia.
A month ago, the University of Georgia conducted a poll of Georgia’s Republican voters found very different results that directly contradict these funny numbers. In fact, the University of Georgia was predicting that Trump-endorsed candidates were going to win almost everything — which is happening in every other state in the country right now.
VOTER GA held a press conference on Monday to announce that 102 Georgia counties could not produce their drop box surveillance videos for the stolen 2020 election.
Let me repeat that number: 102 Georgia counties.
Apparently, 72 counties were forced to admit that all those videos had been destroyed.
Nobody is more jew-pilled, but going along to get along is not the same.
All? They're working on it, but we're not there yet.
Why wouldn't the all be rigged? Because it's difficult to pull it off. That's why they target key races and states.
And yes, it is an illusion.
It's been proven in many races across the country, at every level, but nobody every does much about it. A few states make it more difficult than other states, and sometimes people do go to prison for it. The 2020 presidential election was over the top though. But so many people wanted Trump out of office, people with institutional power, that they let them get away with the steal.
You had a nice window of fair (enough) elections with the reforms of the 1960s, and with punch card systems, before electronic voting machines were put into place after the 2000 elections.
Where do we get all the data?