Calls for de-certication of election after Arizona audit of Presidential vote finds 70,000 Duplicated, Fraudulent, Illegal or Ghost Ballots – TheLiberal.ie – Our News, Your Views

Calls for de-certication of election after Arizona audit of Presidential vote finds 70,000 Duplicated, Fraudulent, Illegal or Ghost Ballots




In what could become a trend across swing states in the US, the findings of the Arizona audit of the Presidential election have been referred to the state’s Attorney General after it was found that there were 70,000 Duplicated, Fraudulent, Illegal or Ghost Ballots.

President Trump and his supporters have contended that 2020 election was stolen by agents of the Democratic party for Joe Biden and now in the wake of the find these results which show 70,000 Duplicated, Fraudulent, Illegal or Ghost Ballots, seven times the margin of Joe Biden’s victory, there are calls for the decision to award Arizona to Biden to be decertified.

The Gateway Pundit reported that the audit presentation to the Arizona State Senate began with Dr. V.A. Shiva Ayyadurai, M.I.T. PhD, the Inventor of Email, revealing that he uncovered more than 17,000 duplicated ballots included in the certified election results in Arizona. These duplicate ballots were greater than the 10,000-ballot margin of victory given to Biden in the state.

The report states in one section:
“In the 2020 presidential election, the margin of victory was only 10,457 votes, a small fraction of the 57,734 ballots with known issues. Again, this is almost 6 times the margin of victory in the Presidential race and is multiples of the margin of victory in other races. Based on these factual findings, the election should not be certified, and the reported results are not reliable.

These bombshell finds have been reported the to the State Attorney General for action and similar actions are already being prepared in a number of other states.

Tell us your thoughts in the Facebook post and share this with your friends.

Share this story with a friend

Share this story

Tell us what you think on our Facebook page