翻盘就在今晚!

威斯康辛州重新数票,开价7百九十万美金, 谁要求谁出钱,由于新冠疫情, 比2016年的2百万翻两番。。。

这些逼着trump破产的节奏啊!

 
据我看到的有以下几个情况:

1. Fox:More than 2,600 uncounted ballots unearthed in Georgia county: report
发现2600没有数的票

2. NewsMax: Ga. County's Uncounted Ballots Will Boost Trump, but Likely Not ...
但是不够翻红

3. News Max:Georgia's Sec. of State Says Fellow Republicans Asked Him to Exclude Legal Ballots
CNN:Georgia secretary of state says Lindsey Graham implied he should try to throw away ballots
州务卿说受到Graham的压力,让他在邮寄选票中努力找到不合格的票,扔掉。
另外,州务卿和妻子还受到死亡威胁。

4. NewsMax: Sen. Graham Denies Pressuring Georgia to Toss Ballots
Graham 否认施加压力,丢掉选票。
1 hr 2 min ago

Witness corroborates claim that Lindsey Graham asked about tossing ballots in Georgia​

From Wes Bruer and Marshall Cohen


Sen. Lindsey Graham arrives for a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on November 10 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.
Sen. Lindsey Graham arrives for a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on November 10 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. Susan Walsh/Pool/Getty Images

A staffer for Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger said Tuesday that he participated in a controversial phone call with Sen. Lindsey Graham and said he heard Graham ask if state officials could throw out ballots.

The comments from the staffer, election implementation manager Gabriel Sterling, corroborate Raffensberger’s recent claims about the phone call with Graham, who is one of President Donald Trump’s most outspoken allies.

Earlier this week, Raffensberger accused Graham of asking him to “look hard and see how many ballots you could throw out,” referring to absentee ballots that skewed heavily in favor of President-elect Joe Biden. Graham denied the claim, saying that it was “ridiculous” that he tried to pressure Raffensberger to throw out legally cast ballots.

In response to a question from CNN about the incident, Sterling said on Tuesday, “What I heard was basically discussions about absentee ballots and if a potentially … if there was a percentage of signatures that weren’t really, truly matching, is there some point we could get to, we could say somebody went to a courtroom could say well, let’s throw (out) all these ballots because we have no way of knowing because the ballots are separated.”

“There is no physical ability for this office to do anything along those lines,” Sterling continued, referring to throwing out absentee ballots that have already been deemed legal by local election officials. “If somebody wanted to go that route, they could go the court route.”

Graham’s comments “might have gone a little to the edge of” what people deem acceptable, Sterling said, but added that he understands why Raffensberger and Graham might have interpreted the conversation differently.

“The President is going to continue to fight, his supporters continue to fight,” Sterling said. “Our job is to continue to follow the law, and we were answering process questions… that’s what we were doing on the call.”
 

指控死人投票竟是乌龙 FOX新闻川粉主播认错了​

文章来源: 中时电子报 于 2020-11-17 11:33:14 - 新闻取自各大新闻媒体,新闻内容并不代表本网立场!
(被阅读 3029 次)



Two accused 'dead' Georgia voters very much alive despite claims - and they voted legally


虽然美国总统川普一再指控美大选舞弊重重,例如在关键战局的乔治亚州出现死人投票。不过,据《今日美国》报导,对于川普阵营指控一名过世14年退伍老兵布拉洛克(James Blalock)竟然能投票,其实是一直对外以婚后全名“詹姆斯.布拉洛克夫人”称呼的96岁遗孀艾格妮丝所投,而一再紧咬此案、亲近川普的《福斯新闻》主播卡尔森13日也就此乌龙案表达道歉。

报导指出,在乔治亚州牛顿郡官员亲自向卡尔森(Tucker Carlson)证实,艾格妮丝(Agnes Blalock)在投票时也是以“詹姆斯.布拉洛克夫人”(Mrs. James E. Blalock)注册选民后,卡尔森向观众表示,“虽然有很多死人投了票...但詹姆斯.布拉洛克并非在其中,故就此向各位观众表达歉意;当然当我们知错时,就如现在也会随时修正”。


报导指出,乔治亚州的选务系统中,由于并未显示“女士”字样,故以“詹姆斯.布拉洛克夫人”注册为选民的艾格妮丝,恐让人第一眼物误认是退伍老兵布拉洛克。卡尔森先前在节目中曾指控指少有25位逝世者竟然可在今年投票,借此证明邮寄投票舞弊机会重重,并要乔治亚州重新计票。不过,由于川普与拜登在该州仅相差1.4万票,故乔治亚州早已宣布以人工重新计票。

卡尔森先前在节目称,当了33年邮差、直到2006年过世的布拉洛克,在14年后仍可以递送邮件,并暗讽“不论是大风大雨甚至死亡都不能阻止他寄送选票;或许从坟墓中投票并非作弊,而是承诺”。不过,艾格妮丝随后向当地电视台表示,“他先生没有投票,那是我”,并补充她投给了民主党的拜登。

此外,曾任乔治亚州州务卿的考克斯(Cathy Cox)表示,虽然大选结果后都有可能有相关的司法争议挑战,但其中有两点是必须证明出来的,就是确实有某种程度的错误、舞弊或处理不当,且数量足够推翻当前选举结果,“你必须证明拜登胜出的1.4万张选票是不当投票或舞弊;如果你只证明了50张或100张,那仍无法推翻选举结果,诉诸法院也无补救结果”。


Fox News host Tucker Carlson apologizes for erroneously claiming a dead man voted in Georgia​

Hannah Yasharoff
USA TODAY
 
你就不用操心啦,如果哪里投票人数超过注册人数,早就叫起来了。

美国人口331 million,2/3有投票权不出格吧?150 million选民投票,离普么?

我要是败灯,老汗都急出来了----求求你们别投我啦,这是真把我这老汉送监狱的节奏啊:monster:
 

我要是败灯,老汗都急出来了----求求你们别投我啦,这是真把我这老汉送监狱的节奏啊:monster:


怕啥?谁不相信谁出钱重新计票就是啦。
 

指控死人投票竟是乌龙 FOX新闻川粉主播认错了​

文章来源: 中时电子报 于 2020-11-17 11:33:14 - 新闻取自各大新闻媒体,新闻内容并不代表本网立场!
(被阅读 3029 次)



Two accused 'dead' Georgia voters very much alive despite claims - and they voted legally


虽然美国总统川普一再指控美大选舞弊重重,例如在关键战局的乔治亚州出现死人投票。不过,据《今日美国》报导,对于川普阵营指控一名过世14年退伍老兵布拉洛克(James Blalock)竟然能投票,其实是一直对外以婚后全名“詹姆斯.布拉洛克夫人”称呼的96岁遗孀艾格妮丝所投,而一再紧咬此案、亲近川普的《福斯新闻》主播卡尔森13日也就此乌龙案表达道歉。

报导指出,在乔治亚州牛顿郡官员亲自向卡尔森(Tucker Carlson)证实,艾格妮丝(Agnes Blalock)在投票时也是以“詹姆斯.布拉洛克夫人”(Mrs. James E. Blalock)注册选民后,卡尔森向观众表示,“虽然有很多死人投了票...但詹姆斯.布拉洛克并非在其中,故就此向各位观众表达歉意;当然当我们知错时,就如现在也会随时修正”。


报导指出,乔治亚州的选务系统中,由于并未显示“女士”字样,故以“詹姆斯.布拉洛克夫人”注册为选民的艾格妮丝,恐让人第一眼物误认是退伍老兵布拉洛克。卡尔森先前在节目中曾指控指少有25位逝世者竟然可在今年投票,借此证明邮寄投票舞弊机会重重,并要乔治亚州重新计票。不过,由于川普与拜登在该州仅相差1.4万票,故乔治亚州早已宣布以人工重新计票。

卡尔森先前在节目称,当了33年邮差、直到2006年过世的布拉洛克,在14年后仍可以递送邮件,并暗讽“不论是大风大雨甚至死亡都不能阻止他寄送选票;或许从坟墓中投票并非作弊,而是承诺”。不过,艾格妮丝随后向当地电视台表示,“他先生没有投票,那是我”,并补充她投给了民主党的拜登。

此外,曾任乔治亚州州务卿的考克斯(Cathy Cox)表示,虽然大选结果后都有可能有相关的司法争议挑战,但其中有两点是必须证明出来的,就是确实有某种程度的错误、舞弊或处理不当,且数量足够推翻当前选举结果,“你必须证明拜登胜出的1.4万张选票是不当投票或舞弊;如果你只证明了50张或100张,那仍无法推翻选举结果,诉诸法院也无补救结果”。


Fox News host Tucker Carlson apologizes for erroneously claiming a dead man voted in Georgia​

Hannah Yasharoff
USA TODAY



好玩儿!
 
1 hr 2 min ago

Witness corroborates claim that Lindsey Graham asked about tossing ballots in Georgia​

From Wes Bruer and Marshall Cohen


Sen. Lindsey Graham arrives for a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on November 10 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.
Sen. Lindsey Graham arrives for a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on November 10 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. Susan Walsh/Pool/Getty Images

A staffer for Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger said Tuesday that he participated in a controversial phone call with Sen. Lindsey Graham and said he heard Graham ask if state officials could throw out ballots.

The comments from the staffer, election implementation manager Gabriel Sterling, corroborate Raffensberger’s recent claims about the phone call with Graham, who is one of President Donald Trump’s most outspoken allies.

Earlier this week, Raffensberger accused Graham of asking him to “look hard and see how many ballots you could throw out,” referring to absentee ballots that skewed heavily in favor of President-elect Joe Biden. Graham denied the claim, saying that it was “ridiculous” that he tried to pressure Raffensberger to throw out legally cast ballots.

In response to a question from CNN about the incident, Sterling said on Tuesday, “What I heard was basically discussions about absentee ballots and if a potentially … if there was a percentage of signatures that weren’t really, truly matching, is there some point we could get to, we could say somebody went to a courtroom could say well, let’s throw (out) all these ballots because we have no way of knowing because the ballots are separated.”

“There is no physical ability for this office to do anything along those lines,” Sterling continued, referring to throwing out absentee ballots that have already been deemed legal by local election officials. “If somebody wanted to go that route, they could go the court route.”

Graham’s comments “might have gone a little to the edge of” what people deem acceptable, Sterling said, but added that he understands why Raffensberger and Graham might have interpreted the conversation differently.

“The President is going to continue to fight, his supporters continue to fight,” Sterling said. “Our job is to continue to follow the law, and we were answering process questions… that’s what we were doing on the call.”

政客不好玩儿。
 

指控死人投票竟是乌龙 FOX新闻川粉主播认错了​

文章来源: 中时电子报 于 2020-11-17 11:33:14 - 新闻取自各大新闻媒体,新闻内容并不代表本网立场!
(被阅读 3029 次)



Two accused 'dead' Georgia voters very much alive despite claims - and they voted legally


虽然美国总统川普一再指控美大选舞弊重重,例如在关键战局的乔治亚州出现死人投票。不过,据《今日美国》报导,对于川普阵营指控一名过世14年退伍老兵布拉洛克(James Blalock)竟然能投票,其实是一直对外以婚后全名“詹姆斯.布拉洛克夫人”称呼的96岁遗孀艾格妮丝所投,而一再紧咬此案、亲近川普的《福斯新闻》主播卡尔森13日也就此乌龙案表达道歉。

报导指出,在乔治亚州牛顿郡官员亲自向卡尔森(Tucker Carlson)证实,艾格妮丝(Agnes Blalock)在投票时也是以“詹姆斯.布拉洛克夫人”(Mrs. James E. Blalock)注册选民后,卡尔森向观众表示,“虽然有很多死人投了票...但詹姆斯.布拉洛克并非在其中,故就此向各位观众表达歉意;当然当我们知错时,就如现在也会随时修正”。


报导指出,乔治亚州的选务系统中,由于并未显示“女士”字样,故以“詹姆斯.布拉洛克夫人”注册为选民的艾格妮丝,恐让人第一眼物误认是退伍老兵布拉洛克。卡尔森先前在节目中曾指控指少有25位逝世者竟然可在今年投票,借此证明邮寄投票舞弊机会重重,并要乔治亚州重新计票。不过,由于川普与拜登在该州仅相差1.4万票,故乔治亚州早已宣布以人工重新计票。

卡尔森先前在节目称,当了33年邮差、直到2006年过世的布拉洛克,在14年后仍可以递送邮件,并暗讽“不论是大风大雨甚至死亡都不能阻止他寄送选票;或许从坟墓中投票并非作弊,而是承诺”。不过,艾格妮丝随后向当地电视台表示,“他先生没有投票,那是我”,并补充她投给了民主党的拜登。

此外,曾任乔治亚州州务卿的考克斯(Cathy Cox)表示,虽然大选结果后都有可能有相关的司法争议挑战,但其中有两点是必须证明出来的,就是确实有某种程度的错误、舞弊或处理不当,且数量足够推翻当前选举结果,“你必须证明拜登胜出的1.4万张选票是不当投票或舞弊;如果你只证明了50张或100张,那仍无法推翻选举结果,诉诸法院也无补救结果”。


Fox News host Tucker Carlson apologizes for erroneously claiming a dead man voted in Georgia​

Hannah Yasharoff
USA TODAY



 
看了一个美国穆斯林的评论,觉得很有道理:“要是川普没有那张大嘴巴,如果懂得克制,多点教养,会是美国有史以来最好的总统“
人无完人 :monster:
 
真够累的,信誓旦旦十几天了
 

年轻的加拿大华裔,对这次美国大选中饱受诟病的媒体业的分析,水平比拒不改悔的老帮菜们强啊:crazy:这次无论谁当选,针对媒体业的立法和改革也在所难免
 
威斯康辛州重新数票,开价7百九十万美金, 谁要求谁出钱,由于新冠疫情, 比2016年的2百万翻两番。。。

这些逼着trump破产的节奏啊!

所有州都应开发这个业务,或转给私有公司,想数几遍都行,还可以给钱自定规则
 

Michigan's largest county certifies election results after Republicans earlier blocked certification​

https://www.cnn.com/profiles/marshall-cohen
By Annie Grayer and Marshall Cohen, CNN

Updated 11:28 PM ET, Tue November 17, 2020
A bipartisan panel in Michigan's largest county unanimously certified its presidential results on Tuesday night, a stunning reversal hours after Republicans had temporarily blocked certification based on dubious claims of voting irregularities in Detroit.

The Wayne County Board of Canvassers initially deadlocked 2-2 on whether to certify the results, with two Democrats voting to certify and two Republicans voting against it, citing concerns of examples where Detroit precincts found discrepancies during their post-election review process. That vote was immediately condemned by Democratic officials and nonpartisan experts, who said the election in Detroit had been conducted cleanly.

President-elect Joe Biden won Michigan by more than 148,000 votes, a victory made possible by a strong showing in Wayne County, where he netted more than 322,000 votes over President Donald Trump.

The initial vote against certification drew the attention of the President, who posted a series of tweets praising the GOP members of the canvassing board for "having courage." He also spread false claims about massive voter fraud and said officials in the state should "flip Michigan back to TRUMP."

Trump has mounted a long-shot attempt to overturn the election results through lawsuits and the Electoral College -- and one of the Trump campaign's legal advisers said the initial refusal to certify the results should open the door for the "Republican state legislator (sic) will select the electors." GOP lawmakers in Michigan have repeatedly said they'll respect the statewide popular vote and won't intervene in the process.

When announcing their decision to certify the results, the board also called on Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson to do a comprehensive audit on the precincts in Detroit that had found discrepancies during their post-election review. In an interview with CNN's Chris Cuomo on "Cuomo Prime Time," Benson said she would conduct that audit, and she praised the decision by the county board to reverse itself and certify the results.

"It appears that the truth won in this scenario," she said. "Basically, the evidence was clear: There were no irregularities, there was no evidence of widespread fraud and in fact there were simply minor clerical errors. ... I think they did the right thing, they performed their duty and they certified the election for the voters in Wayne County."

Abrupt reversal​

Even after the initial party-line deadlock, experts were skeptical that the results from Wayne County would ultimately be excluded from the statewide count. That would have put Biden's Michigan victory in jeopardy -- but CNN has projected that he will win 306 electoral votes, which means he'd still become the next president even in the unlikely scenario that he doesn't get Michigan's 16 electoral votes.

During the meeting of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers, Vice Chair Jonathan Kinloch called the earlier deadlock "reckless and irresponsible." Kinloch is one of the two Democrats on the panel.

"This board, over the years, has taken pride in not allowing politics to show itself in the actions of what we do," Kinloch said. "There is no reason under the sun for us to not certify this election. I believe politics made its presence here today, and I think forever that this board will have to live with the fact that we have allowed external, non-relevant issues to impact this decision today, hoping to change and bring about an outcome that will not happen."

The Republican chair of the board, Monica Palmer, explained why she had earlier voted against certification.

"Based on what I saw and went through in poll books in this canvas, I believe that we do not have complete and accurate information in those poll books," Palmer said.

At one point, Palmer suggested that the board certify the rest of the county's results, aside from Detroit, which was not pursued by the board.
"I would be open to a motion to certify communities other than the city of Detroit" Palmer said, referring to other parts of Wayne County.

When the meeting opened up for public comments, Wayne County citizens lined up to voice their frustration over the board's initial decision to delay the certification of results for hours.

Rev. Wendell Anthony, the head of the Detroit branch of the NAACP, harshly criticized Palmer's suggestion to exclude Detroit from the county's certification of results.

"You have extracted a Black city out of a county and said the only one that I have fault against is the city of Detroit, where 80% of the people who reside here are African Americans. Shame on you," Anthony said. "Shame on you for leading to this level of corruption. You have disavowed your right to even sit in the seat that you occupy. You are a disgrace as it relates to the ability to have a free and impartial election in this nation."

Edith Lee-Payne, who worked as a supervisor of poll workers at the TCF Center in Detroit where the city's absentee ballots were counted, laid out the step-by-step process of how absentee ballots were counted, hoping to discredit any suggestions of fraud.

She shared that at one point a Republican poll challenger approached her in a way that made her afraid for her life. To put into perspective how hurtful the delay in certification was to her, Lee-Payne reflected on joining the march on Washington with Dr. Martin Luther King when she was 12 years old.
"I marched with Dr. King. I take that with pride, I say that with pride" Payne said. "What you're doing to all of the people in the city of Detroit, people in Wayne County, and to me -- because I really have to take this personal -- is, I really have no words for it."

An Air Force veteran and University of Michigan law student, who was a nonpartisan observer at the TCF Center on November 4, grew emotional when saying the board's decision diminished the rights he sought to defend.

"As someone who served in the military, I was willing to sacrifice my life so that every single American would have the right to vote. I thought that was something that we all believed in as Americans. It breaks my heart to see that some of my fellow Americans seem to disagree," Joseph Zimmerman said.

In a written statement after the initial deadlock, Benson said it was "common" for some precincts to have minor discrepancies with their poll books. But she also said, "Importantly, this is not an indication that any votes were improperly cast or counted."

Election experts and Michigan insiders reacted with shock to the original vote.

"The people have spoken: Joe Biden won Michigan by more than 140,000 votes," Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, said in a statement. "Today's action is a blatant attempt to undermine the will of the voters. The process, however, will move forward. Under Michigan law, the Board of State of Canvassers will now finish the job and I have every expectation they will certify the results when the job is done."

Nancy Kaffer, a columnist at the Detroit Free Press, tweeted, "This is unprecedented in my 20 years covering government here." Amy Walter of the nonpartisan Cook Political Report tweeted, "There has been zero evidence of fraud here or elsewhere" and said Republican efforts to block certification "does real and lasting damage to our institutions."

The GOP-led Michigan Senate voted in September in support of resolution confirming that the state's electors should be faithful to voting for the presidential candidate as certified by Michigan's election officials, Amber McCann, deputy chief of staff for Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, confirmed to CNN.

This story and its headline have been updated with additional developments on Tuesday.

 

Michigan's largest county certifies election results after Republicans earlier blocked certification​

CNN Profiles - Marshall Cohen - Reporter and Producer - CNN
By Annie Grayer and Marshall Cohen, CNN

Updated 11:28 PM ET, Tue November 17, 2020
A bipartisan panel in Michigan's largest county unanimously certified its presidential results on Tuesday night, a stunning reversal hours after Republicans had temporarily blocked certification based on dubious claims of voting irregularities in Detroit.

The Wayne County Board of Canvassers initially deadlocked 2-2 on whether to certify the results, with two Democrats voting to certify and two Republicans voting against it, citing concerns of examples where Detroit precincts found discrepancies during their post-election review process. That vote was immediately condemned by Democratic officials and nonpartisan experts, who said the election in Detroit had been conducted cleanly.

President-elect Joe Biden won Michigan by more than 148,000 votes, a victory made possible by a strong showing in Wayne County, where he netted more than 322,000 votes over President Donald Trump.

The initial vote against certification drew the attention of the President, who posted a series of tweets praising the GOP members of the canvassing board for "having courage." He also spread false claims about massive voter fraud and said officials in the state should "flip Michigan back to TRUMP."

Trump has mounted a long-shot attempt to overturn the election results through lawsuits and the Electoral College -- and one of the Trump campaign's legal advisers said the initial refusal to certify the results should open the door for the "Republican state legislator (sic) will select the electors." GOP lawmakers in Michigan have repeatedly said they'll respect the statewide popular vote and won't intervene in the process.

When announcing their decision to certify the results, the board also called on Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson to do a comprehensive audit on the precincts in Detroit that had found discrepancies during their post-election review. In an interview with CNN's Chris Cuomo on "Cuomo Prime Time," Benson said she would conduct that audit, and she praised the decision by the county board to reverse itself and certify the results.

"It appears that the truth won in this scenario," she said. "Basically, the evidence was clear: There were no irregularities, there was no evidence of widespread fraud and in fact there were simply minor clerical errors. ... I think they did the right thing, they performed their duty and they certified the election for the voters in Wayne County."

Abrupt reversal​

Even after the initial party-line deadlock, experts were skeptical that the results from Wayne County would ultimately be excluded from the statewide count. That would have put Biden's Michigan victory in jeopardy -- but CNN has projected that he will win 306 electoral votes, which means he'd still become the next president even in the unlikely scenario that he doesn't get Michigan's 16 electoral votes.

During the meeting of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers, Vice Chair Jonathan Kinloch called the earlier deadlock "reckless and irresponsible." Kinloch is one of the two Democrats on the panel.

"This board, over the years, has taken pride in not allowing politics to show itself in the actions of what we do," Kinloch said. "There is no reason under the sun for us to not certify this election. I believe politics made its presence here today, and I think forever that this board will have to live with the fact that we have allowed external, non-relevant issues to impact this decision today, hoping to change and bring about an outcome that will not happen."

The Republican chair of the board, Monica Palmer, explained why she had earlier voted against certification.

"Based on what I saw and went through in poll books in this canvas, I believe that we do not have complete and accurate information in those poll books," Palmer said.

At one point, Palmer suggested that the board certify the rest of the county's results, aside from Detroit, which was not pursued by the board.
"I would be open to a motion to certify communities other than the city of Detroit" Palmer said, referring to other parts of Wayne County.

When the meeting opened up for public comments, Wayne County citizens lined up to voice their frustration over the board's initial decision to delay the certification of results for hours.

Rev. Wendell Anthony, the head of the Detroit branch of the NAACP, harshly criticized Palmer's suggestion to exclude Detroit from the county's certification of results.

"You have extracted a Black city out of a county and said the only one that I have fault against is the city of Detroit, where 80% of the people who reside here are African Americans. Shame on you," Anthony said. "Shame on you for leading to this level of corruption. You have disavowed your right to even sit in the seat that you occupy. You are a disgrace as it relates to the ability to have a free and impartial election in this nation."

Edith Lee-Payne, who worked as a supervisor of poll workers at the TCF Center in Detroit where the city's absentee ballots were counted, laid out the step-by-step process of how absentee ballots were counted, hoping to discredit any suggestions of fraud.

She shared that at one point a Republican poll challenger approached her in a way that made her afraid for her life. To put into perspective how hurtful the delay in certification was to her, Lee-Payne reflected on joining the march on Washington with Dr. Martin Luther King when she was 12 years old.
"I marched with Dr. King. I take that with pride, I say that with pride" Payne said. "What you're doing to all of the people in the city of Detroit, people in Wayne County, and to me -- because I really have to take this personal -- is, I really have no words for it."

An Air Force veteran and University of Michigan law student, who was a nonpartisan observer at the TCF Center on November 4, grew emotional when saying the board's decision diminished the rights he sought to defend.

"As someone who served in the military, I was willing to sacrifice my life so that every single American would have the right to vote. I thought that was something that we all believed in as Americans. It breaks my heart to see that some of my fellow Americans seem to disagree," Joseph Zimmerman said.

In a written statement after the initial deadlock, Benson said it was "common" for some precincts to have minor discrepancies with their poll books. But she also said, "Importantly, this is not an indication that any votes were improperly cast or counted."

Election experts and Michigan insiders reacted with shock to the original vote.

"The people have spoken: Joe Biden won Michigan by more than 140,000 votes," Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, said in a statement. "Today's action is a blatant attempt to undermine the will of the voters. The process, however, will move forward. Under Michigan law, the Board of State of Canvassers will now finish the job and I have every expectation they will certify the results when the job is done."

Nancy Kaffer, a columnist at the Detroit Free Press, tweeted, "This is unprecedented in my 20 years covering government here." Amy Walter of the nonpartisan Cook Political Report tweeted, "There has been zero evidence of fraud here or elsewhere" and said Republican efforts to block certification "does real and lasting damage to our institutions."

The GOP-led Michigan Senate voted in September in support of resolution confirming that the state's electors should be faithful to voting for the presidential candidate as certified by Michigan's election officials, Amber McCann, deputy chief of staff for Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, confirmed to CNN.

This story and its headline have been updated with additional developments on Tuesday.


忒长了。最后结果有啥变动?
 
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