Summary
Transcript
They still have 274,000 ballots to process. They have allegedly 155,000 ballots that are ready to process, but somehow they haven’t managed to vote yet. I don’t understand what the excuse is. 450,000 outstanding ballots. Outrageous. The other big county, Tucson, Pima County, 106,000 uncounted ballots. Total state wide, 718,000 ballots still outstanding. So as a result, technically the presidential race is still uncertain there, even though many have called it for President Trump, so he is likely to win, but we don’t know who the senator is going to be. There’s a big Senate race there, and it’s not fair to either senator to have, or either candidate to have this terribly slow process.
As I’ve been saying, counting ballots after election day invites fraud, undermines voter confidence, and I would argue is contrary to federal law that sets an election day, not an election week. Arizona is making a mockery of our election system right now, and I tell you, after this is all done, and after all the litigation is settled, they got a clean house in terms of election integrity out there. So voters, not only in Arizona, but in other parts of the country, are reassured that there are no shenanigans going on, but it’s fair to conclude things are not up to snuff in Arizona right now because of this inexcusably slow count.
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