Dems are trying to cheat , Mail fraud is already happening

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“Don’t freak out early alert for tonight-Pennsylvania reports Election Day results before mail in ballot results which will make the early reporting look skewed to Rs because more Dems vote by mail (70% of requested ballots this year were dems) so hang tight tonight”


Translation: “Don’t freak out when the real vote numbers come in, because we’ll be working hard behind the scenes to change the numbers and steal the election. We’ve already got Election Theft Teams in place.”
 

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1667997326838.jpeg
 

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Florida and Virginia: instant election results the minute polls close
Arizona and Nevada: several days of elaborate interpretative analysis required to excavate possible election results
 

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The left: we will delay these results until we have the numbers we need to beat your side
 

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Outstanding House Races in California​

Democrats are making gains in many of these races as the mail vote is counted.


Republicans have the upper hand in the race for control of the House, with a lead in 221 districts — more than the 218 needed to win.

If current trends in the post-Election Day count continued, they would maintain that narrow advantage, based on an analysis of the returns since Wednesday.

Republicans would prevail with a 219-216 majority, with Democrats narrowly overtaking them in only two districts — Arizona’s Sixth and California’s 13th. But recent trends may not continue. The count will shift to new kinds of ballots, like Election Day drop-offs, late-arriving mail ballots and provisionals. These may break differently than those counted so far.
Democrats’ hopes, while faint, are still alive for one main reason: They generally appear to be faring better in the post-Election Day count in California — where millions of votes remain to be counted — than they did on election night.
California looms so large in the battle for the House because the state is home to half of the races that remain to be called — including six uncalled races Republicans currently lead. A staggering 40 percent of the vote remains to be counted statewide, based on data released by the California secretary of state, giving each party plenty of opportunities to gain ground.
So far, Democrats haven’t led the post-Tuesday count in California by enough to be favored to come back and take the handful of seats they would need to win the chamber.
Democrats have retained a glimmer of hope in California’s 13th, 22nd, 27th and 45th districts — enough to have a chance to control the chamber. In many cases, the postelection count is still so early that there is time for Democrats to hope for a reversal.
There are two districts, however, where Democrats have not significantly overperformed in the late count — California’s Third and California’s 41st — raising questions about how they can mount a comeback. White voters represent a larger share of the electorate in these districts than in most other battlegrounds in California.
The Republican strength in the late count in these districts fits a broader pattern with mail voting in recent years, when the late mail vote has at once tended to be relatively young, nonwhite and Republican. In the diverse districts of the Central Valley and Orange County, the Hispanic share of the late mail vote seems to swamp the Republicans who vote closer to Election Day. Where the electorate is not so diverse, the late vote appears tilted toward Republicans.
Indeed, Republicans have gained post-election in most districts outside California, where white voters tend to make up a larger share of the electorate.
It’s important to emphasize that this extrapolation is for illustrative purposes. Current trends will not continue indefinitely; the kinds of ballots being counted will change, yielding different results. The mail ballots arriving after Election Day, for instance, will not be like those that arrived beforehand. Provisional ballots may be different altogether.
Democrats have gained ground far more often than Republicans since Tuesday in California. In some contested districts, late mail ballots have been more than 20 points more favorable for Democrats than those cast on election night.
Already, Republicans have overcome their deficit in Colorado’s Third (Lauren Boebert’s district). And they still have an outside chance to come back and win Washington’s Third, where they have made steady gains, though the number of remaining ballots is dwindling.

One exception is Arizona’s Sixth, where Republicans currently lead but where Democrats have been gaining. At the moment, Arizona’s Sixth figures prominently in the Democratic path to a comeback in the House. But this may prove to be a case where the extrapolation of trends isn’t representative. So far, Arizona has largely counted mail ballots that arrived before Election Day; Republicans hope to do better among the ballots dropped off on Election Day.


DISTRICTRESULT DAY AFTER ELECTIONRESULTS SINCERESULTS AT 10 AM ET, NOV. 12IF MAIL TRENDS CONTINUE (THEY MAY NOT)
Calif. 3 »
Sierra Nevada
Rep. +6
144,961
votes
Rep. +4
23,377
votes
Rep. +6
168,338
votes
Rep. +6
321,000
est. tot. votes
Calif. 27 »
North Los Angeles County
Rep. +15
113,830
Dem. +10
16,775
Rep. +12
130,605
Rep. +4
204,000
Calif. 41 »
Inland Empire (Palm Desert/Corona)
Rep. <1
114,539
Rep. +8
14,073
Rep. +1
128,612
Rep. +4
218,000
Calif. 45 »
Orange County
Rep. +11
132,585
Dem. +5
25,898
Rep. +8
158,483
Rep. +3
238,000
Calif. 22 »
Central Valley (Bakersfield area)
Rep. +8
42,682
Dem. +4
13,794
Rep. +5
56,476
Rep. +1
106,000
Calif. 13 »
Central Valley (Merced area)
Rep. <1
69,227
Dem. +1
10,083
Rep. <1
79,310
Dem. +1
130,000
Calif. 47 »
Newport Beach/Huntington Beach
Dem. <1
168,290
Dem. +13
27,611
Dem. +2
195,901
Dem. +6
292,000
Calif. 49 »
Orange County/San Diego suburbs
Dem. +2
174,764
Dem. +15
36,257
Dem. +4
211,021
Dem. +8
322,000
Calif. 21 »
Central Valley (Fresno area)
Dem. +7
67,738
Dem. +20
14,219
Dem. +9
81,957
Dem. +10
109,000
Calif. 35 »
Pomona/Ontario
Dem. +13
53,596
Dem. +9
16,765
Dem. +12
70,361
Dem. +11
123,000
Calif. 26 »
Ventura County
Dem. +8
134,765
Dem. +15
17,226
Dem. +9
151,991
Dem. +11
256,000
Calif. 6 »
Sacramento suburbs
Dem. +12
64,843
Dem. +14
29,321
Dem. +12
94,164
Dem. +13
181,000
Source: Associated Press. Results are as of 9 a.m. Eastern on Nov. 12.
 

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See, you put that comment in quotes, which is makes you a liar, and shows that you lie as easily as your Fuhrer, Nazi Scum. Oh, and, how's that "Voter Fraud" investigation coming along? It must SUCK to know that you're "powerless" to start the rampant Dem voter fraud, huh? :ROFLMAO: :arrowhead :ROFLMAO: :arrowhead :ROFLMAO: :arrowhead :highfive:
Lol. That makes as much sense as ur defense in those 0-114 court ceases u Nazi nut licker. Senile ol fuck
 

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Democrats ‘collecting or harvesting’ ballots is the new way for them to hold on to political power.

Refusing to debate or hiding in the basement doesn’t matter if Democrats focus on ballot collection.
 

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