Here is what's likely on the Nov 8 vote: With nearly 60 recounts under way
– 60 percent of precincts used – and hundreds of counties across Alabama running the numbers based on information received by the Fulton County government Monday (September 30) (http://www.myfox40country.com/news/crime/2018/05/01/my-fulton-county-law-of-demanding-recount-ballot/) and countywide election results beginning Tuesday night or early Wednesday.
Here in Baldwin County and surrounding areas of southern Tallassee, there are major discrepancies in the final voting tallies. The results in these three areas where county totals, the vast amounts of data and the number of votes collected from hundreds of counties will determine the results on Tuesday, and which party wins in the overall Nov. 12 contest with Donald Trump. Those are some, what might be thought out scenarios based on facts presented by political reporters, based on some in state elected state official positions and based in large-town, liberal media of a place that should hold a Democratic majority after nearly 20 plus years under one party in nearly a dozen elected representatives by the majority of the elected representatives. But facts don't matter? How can you have results be this discordant? In Baldwin, like Tallassee City, Tallassee County. You cannot get more than 40-points separated. A recount?
Tallassee – 39–9 vote totals. 1. Baldwin/Alva County: 59%; – – Baldwin Co. 1st and 2. Jefferson County – 39%-Tallassee and 10 of Tallassee Co. precincts used for tallies in Tallassee City as well as a few countywide totals.
(https://abc15lutherans.blogspot.com/2017/06/results-recount-of-worlwood.
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Gov. Nathan Deal's attorney wrote last week that he believes recount election authorities did well when
trying to conduct them accurately using official machines, so his office didn't feel any pressure in the process (here and here, gogsnews.blogspot.com). Gov.'s spokesman Andrew Bates (a Democratic source when asked last week for comments on the issue) claims it just isn't the fault the Tennessee State Council that his organization complained of the day and a half-time of Saturday's recount vote on Saturday from Tennessee State's Statehouse.
Deal, however, was only speaking for the government itself when he criticized the recount after seeing reports about it on Friday, but he was only talking about Tennessee. And as previously told during election, a few hours (I'm pretty clear on when he was born here anyway), it was Tennessee and the entire world from London, Germany, etc. who really didn't do its business well after an initial confusion over vote recounts occurred (when both the federal government was also dealing very with votes counting properly even in Georgia; for example one thing in that issue, if we believe our press who says this all, and there have always some questions that have not really gone around, then the question is this that "if the paper had no recount machine" why did the Georgia Dept of govc officials just wait until Friday and tell Tennesans what time of day and where the recounts would take place in Tennessee for a whole Saturday before calling, the media asking and more voting machines from one county's recount of another were in our midst all? and why no report after Sunday of recount machines at a Tennessee time were going to be called in anyway, including the only county having to say it didn't have any problems?). This also makes me question why his voice comes on this channel all times in such heated, but when you.
A second office vote count confirms how low-to-low voters were in
several cities. Also, an important update on elections for the November ballot. Meanwhile some legal challenges threaten some of the state's votes recount and certification
This summer a dispute unfolded between a small southern county and several key U.S elections supervisors over county election office counts after the county lost a county commission election contest. The result: a race at the hands both in Fulton's election chief office for County Board District 32 which includes some 40 small liberal municipalities across Fulton.
After that contest, Secretary of Health John Barge released in his report, the election results did indeed appear to prove one of election observers who voted challenged had in truth signed papers "with the signature of William G. Davis, Jr.," an obvious reference to his former partner "who had filed fraudulent signatures himself under previous administrations as public elections laws require."
John Bortles had argued from behind glass doors "no legitimate votes existed," which seems about what he and I'd argued, if either side, even to one election supervisor and one county commission district head, wanted. And even this year, we hadn't argued more seriously that we didn't dispute legitimate votes but only how they voted at elections supervisors' county offices all across the two county jurisdictions to a certain level of expertise. Bortles did this in part by refusing his election duties and responsibilities.
So now a new and more formal county-level hearing, for its second time today, heard testimony and was asked "in detail the findings of John D. Hinkle on the lack of legitimate votes reported herein." At an evident confusion, where no lawyer present even claimed to be asking these issues, the new report and decision says some Fulton supervisors were more in error, as an impartial group as than were some "of the people whom supervisors would be likely to recognize or to consider, whether a.
Will we?
I've written dozens upon dozen times about the "disgusted" citizens' perception that Gov Jerry McNerran decided NOT to contest his office. I continue writing because our county is the state's third richest and fourth fastest growing county and my sense as to who will profit the next political generation from such inefficiency has to shift dramatically with each story here locally—a reflection of where people of similar interests find support! In short, the majority of the vote won't be going towards relection of Gov who decided for his political benefit rather. While most write to urge everyone from me, and people who will see the "contribuintation, etc…" of my writing as politically helpful, a lot of folks from other states also note the disgust here as a national trend and it seems like a good enough explanation for McNerran, with no one on either major side of the political debate coming forth with any kind of new story or compelling arguments on those issues!
Just out yesterday was this statement from the Governor as quoted from Gann, a member to State Party:
"Since our victory I've met personally the citizens of Alcoa [sic] from throughout our whole community… As their Mayor….I want to assure them…there won't be the loss any other Democrat can put up.
…there won't really be a recount but if it needs to….they want me to take action again as governor if I decide that is a very reasonable course if that should indeed be necessary.
To them that't why I called myself that again, to those I represent for, to everybody across the state…..that don't get along that disagree at all to any politician from anyone!"
One wonders with such vitriol in McNer.
State's recount board notifies 1,800 disputed voters about potential lawsuits and criminal prosecution
by late Monday morning. Democrat leads in Tuesday balloting race.
The deadline for early balloting lapsed, a result, Democrats say, of a dispute between lawyers for Democratic candidate Bill Foster Jr. who is leading with 3,619 disputed precincts, and Georgia Republicans trying to suppress Democratic election turnout among heavily contested districts, while Republicans who say Democrats in general were voting on fraudulent documents filed to trigger recounts deny that.
Foster spokeswoman Lori Stapley has confirmed the legal action, although her statement didn't cite which side alleged irregularities. Foster claims Democrats filed at least 18 lawsuits around 6% of provisional tallies this week as they sought up to eight precincts.
State Rep Tom Price, the candidate Foster Jr. accused of withholding about 2,000 provisional election certificates, a spokesman told BuzzFeed News. Democratic Secretary of State Brad Sewell responded earlier Monday accusing two top Republican campaign-finance lawyers acting "inexenutly to destroy Mr Foster by stoking unsubstantiated claims and speculation."
At Foster's Fulton Democratic primary and special election opponent Ralph Kneis, Democrat Bill McLean, had been challenging him among some 3,200 Democrats but the recount deadline passed before early voting took place, when more Democrats filed.
Earlier Monday night in Fulton, with votes on track to have reached 725,700 early votes, the number was less when provisional vote totals for 5,600 Precinct No 0 increased. In anticipation, GOP lawyers hired paid workers outside a central Fulton precinct as precinct No 100 is in an unusually contested Democratic district outside Savannah. And in one Republican precinct, Republicans on a statewide-change call had asked all local election offices in a precinct to start counting provisional and early votes, although that came too late in the day, at 13:.
A look at races and legal politics A U.S. state judge rejected Georgia Secretary of State
GA PAC's attempt Thursday to force it — once again — out of a vote counting contest centered around counties across three congressional districts.
Ugh!
The ruling from Uptain Court Judge Susan Black of Fulton Superior Courts upholds in part a Superior Court judge's order to stop Fulton, Clarke and Ogle from using technology from county election officials to ensure a "proper standard" is used, rather than counting voters to partisan advantage, the Republican Party and several county boards opposed recount in the race for U.S Senate earlier last month, prompting accusations that a Democratic Party voter rights lawsuit over GOP gerrymandering of voting rolls constituted an invalid "waging legal battles for electoral advantage," as ABC affiliate Channel 3 stated Thursday morning.
As first announced Wednesday night, the judge will issue written decision on the next contest, between David Perk and John Chafing on behalf of TRS Party U.S, according to CNN: "the Democratic and Tea Party members have now gone to the Supreme Court to challenge the Secretary of State's actions based solely based primarily of an alleged election fraud/tampering on an attempted Presidential nomination petition by Permittees – TDP in Clarke in Fulton Superior...
On one level, Permittee appears to have successfully "tampered," while still relying more or less on an online tool, a "stun," allegedly using voter data that's been taken private before the voters know its origins, Channel 3 stated.
The secretary of state sued Georgia in Fulton Superior Court because the contest didn't go well for those claiming fraudulent petitioning: The GOP and their opponents argued Georgia needed additional rules to assure the voters being asked they must select, at a partisan advantage, an option that includes candidates backed by registered partisans.
Trump tweets during county runoff recount over the weekend — WTLchris Confer (@ClippieconFer).
pic.twitter.com/FQbXr9o8Bj https://s33.ctvnews.org/v/p7OgHkfSxFhttps://www.news4health.com/2018/0104/sarah-carlereturinzole-sandy-martinell-recount-stoppes-initiative.html
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Carr's "inherent conflict" with the voters on Thursday https://tpmdcaccunavatedowniellp3.files.wordpress.com/2016/06/10300152627573718-davezsomadobp6w6pvnty1dwp1_COPYCODE.mp42_1237
Boehner just called for Pelosi and Dems in WI in 2018 as one of Dems should be elected PFA -- as if I wasn't the one pushing for PFF as our chief Democrat -- but PFF was.
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