President Trump Indicted for defending Americans

What did President Trump’s attorney mean when he said that the indictment for “conspiracy to undermine the election” gives Trump’s team a chance to relitigate the 2020 election? What would that have to do with the criminal charges he and other leaked co-conspirators face?

At its core, the behaviors which are being made out to be criminal are ones related to not accepting the election results and conceding to Joe Biden. This was in spite of multiple publicly known events both before, during and especially immediately after (i.e. the early hours of the first morning after the election) the election. These were beautifully documented by various alternative media outlets and many dedicated citizen researchers and even witnesses to the anomalies and crimes. Even though lawsuits were filed with hundreds of attached affidavits by people who had been involved in various election operations that night or who had expertise in the subject areas, not a single court let a case move to even the discovery level…

The standard of evidence required to “have standing” to have a case heard by a court has always been that the complainant has to have a stake in the outcome, i.e. will personally suffer or will suffer in a lawfully recognized representative capacity harm if the case is not heard. As the sitting President of the United States, Trump definitely qualified in his representative capacity as President as having an interest in the outcome of the election which would determine if the people of America had voted to have him continue as President for another term.

As for evidence to get a hearing, the standard has always been just that it is more likely than not that the allegations in the suit are true; then once set for a hearing, the discovery process enables the gathering of further evidence. Hundreds of affidavits from people directly working counting the ballots that odd first night after the election certainly met that standard. Yet case after case was thrown out for lack of standing.

Here is a summary from the american bar association. (They are somewhat left biased but at least you can see the cases were not out in left field crazy)

October 27, 2022

Litigation in the 2020 Election

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The Standing Committee on Election Law is pleased to provide you with a list of pending and recent cases litigating election procedures for the 2020 election.  Given the Coronavirus, the prevalence of early and mail-in voting, and the hyper-partisanship of our politics, it’s an unusual year.  And the following list is an unusually long docket.  We hope you will find it helpful as you navigate this complicated election year. In addition, you might also be interested in an article highlighting the numerous unsigned orders of the Supreme Court (New York Times, October 26:  Adam Liptak, “Missing from Supreme Court’s Election Cases:  Reasons for its Rulings.”). 

The Committee is grateful to advisory committee member Frances Goins and her associate, Lauren Garretson, who authored this memo.  Given the press of time, we hope you will be forgiving of any inadvertent errors.

U.S. Supreme Court Decisions

People First of Ala. v. Merrill, Nos. 19A1063, 20A67 (S. Ct.)
(witness and notary requirements)

Complaint Filed: May 1, 2020

State: Alabama

Current Status or Final Disposition: Defendants’ Emergency Application for Stay Filed with the U.S. Supreme Court October 15, 2020; Stay Granted (October 21, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs People First of Alabama, individual voters, and others sued Alabama Secretary of State Merrill, claiming that the State lacked the requisite safety and accessibility procedures for voting during the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, the plaintiffs claimed: (1) the requirements that absentee ballots be notarized or witnessed by two adults, the prohibition against curbside voting, and the photo identification requirements as applied interfered with the right to vote; (2) the state had failed to provide reasonable accommodations for those individuals with health conditions that made in-person voting high risk amidst the pandemic; and (3) the witness requirements and the prohibition against curbside voting violated the Voting Rights Act. The Supreme Court granted the application for stay by the defendants, and stayed the Northern District of Alabama’s September 30 order granting a permanent injunction pending appeal to the Eleventh Circuit.

In re Bowyer, No. 20-858 (S. Ct.)
(electoral college)

Complaint Filed: December 2, 2020

State: Arizona

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition for Writ of Mandamus Denied (March 1, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiffs, Republican Party nominees to be Presidential Electors for Arizona, filed suit against Arizona Governor Ducey and Arizona Secretary of State Hobbs. The plaintiffs argued that the Arizona election had violated the Elections and Electors Clauses, the Equal Protection Clause, and the Due Process Clause of the U.S. Constitution, as well as state election law. The allegations included fabricated ballots and fraudulent use of the election system’s hardware. The plaintiffs also sought a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to prevent the governor from transmitting the certified election results to the Electoral College. The U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss the case, concluding that the court could not decertify the election results in the state and that accusations of election fraud “that find favor in the public sphere of gossip and innuendo cannot be a substitute for earnest pleadings and procedure in federal court.”  The plaintiffs then filed an emergency petition for extraordinary writ of mandamus with the U.S. Supreme Court on December 15, 2020. In January 2021, the Supreme Court denied the motion to expedite consideration of the case without issuing an opinion. On March 1, the Court denied the petition for writ of mandamus without issuing an opinion.

Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee, No. 19-1257 (S. Ct.)
(fraud and vote dilution claims)

Complaint Filed: Petition for Writ of Certiorari Filed April 27, 2020

State: Arizona

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition for Writ of Certiorari Granted (October 2, 2020)

Summary: This case was consolidated with Arizona Republican Party v. Democratic National Committee, No. 19-1258 (S. Ct.). Individual voters, the DNC, and others sued the Arizona Secretary of State alleging that state laws imposing criminal penalties for assisting with ballot collection and for casting ballots in the incorrect precinct were unconstitutional, even though their ostensible purpose was to prevent voter fraud. The complaints alleged violations of the First and Fourteenth Amendments, and the Voting Rights Act insofar as the laws allegedly denied the right to vote on account of race or color, unduly burdened the right to vote, and denied voters equal protection by treating voters differently across counties. The District Court ruled in the defendants’ favor, but the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded, holding that Arizona’s policy of wholly discarding out-of-precinct ballots and the criminalization of collecting absentee ballots have a discriminatory impact on African-American, Native American, and Latino voters in violation of the Voting Rights Act. The Supreme Court granted certiorari on October 2.

Wood v. Raffensperger, No. 20-14418 (S. Ct.)
(restrictions on voting by mail)

Complaint Filed: November 13, 2020

State: Georgia

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion to Expedite Denied (January 11, 2021); Distributed for Conference Scheduled February 19, 2021 (January 27, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiff Wood, an individual Georgia voter, sued various George election officials to enjoin certification of the November general election results, secure a recount, and establish new rules for the January senate run-off election. Wood claimed that the absentee-ballot and recount procedures violated state law and his rights under the U.S. Constitution. The District Court for the Northern District of Georgia denied Wood’s motion for a temporary restraining order enjoining the certification of the state election results, and Wood appealed. The Eleventh Circuit affirmed, holding that because Georgia had already certified its election results, the motion to delay certification was moot. Following the Eleventh Circuit decision, the plaintiffs petitioned for writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court and filed an accompanying motion to expedite consideration. The Court denied the motion to expedite on January 11, 2021. But on January 27, the case was distributed for conference, scheduled for February 19.

Pearson v. Kemp (In Re: Pearson), No. 20-816 (S. Ct.)
(fraud and vote dilution)

Complaint Filed: November 25, 2020

State: Georgia

Current Status or Final Disposition: Joint Stipulation to Dismiss Appeal (January 19, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiffs, Presidential electors from Georgia, sued Georgia Governor Kemp and other state officials, alleging that the state’s vote-tabulation machines had been vulnerable to irregularities that rendered the state’s certified 2020 presidential election results suspect. On November 27, the plaintiffs filed a motion for injunctive relief in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, seeking: (1) a temporary restraining order to prevent the defendants from altering forensic data on voting machines; (2) a de-certification of the presidential election results, or a stay in the delivery of the certified results to the Electoral College; and (3) an order making the voting machines available to the plaintiffs for forensic analysis. The district court granted a temporary restraining order, but only to prevent the defendants from altering the data on the voting machines. The plaintiffs then filed a notice of interlocutory appeal with the Eleventh Circuit, claiming that although the district court had not actually denied the remaining requests for relief yet, that they had been “effectively denied.” The Eleventh Circuit disagreed, holding that the case did not meet the criteria for interlocutory review because it did not present purely legal questions, nor did the plaintiffs seek to appeal a final order. The plaintiffs filed an emergency petition for extraordinary writ of mandamus with the U.S. Supreme court in December. Prior to then President-elect Biden’s inauguration, the plaintiffs filed a motion for expedited consideration of their petition, which the Supreme Court denied without issuing an opinion. Several days later, the parties filed a joint stipulation to dismiss the appeal.

King v. Whitmer, No. 20-815 (S. Ct.)
(fraud and vote dilution)

Complaint Filed: November 25, 2020

State: Michigan

Current Status or Final Disposition: Briefs in Opposition to Petition for Writ of Certiorari Filed (January 14, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiffs, a group of Michigan voters and nominees of the Republican Party to be presidential electors in Michigan, brought suit against Michigan Governor Whitmer and other state officials, alleging widespread voter fraud and various violations of Michigan voting law. The plaintiffs then filed a First Amended Complaint on November 29, alleging various constitutional violations under 42 U.S.C. section 1983 of: (1) the Elections and Electors Clauses, (2) the Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Clause, and (3) the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Clause. The plaintiffs also alleged a violation of the Michigan Election Code. The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan denied the plaintiffs’ motion in its entirety, finding that Michigan had already certified its election results and that the court did not have the power to undo them. The court concluded by noting that the suit “seems less about achieving the relief Plaintiffs seek—as much of that relief is beyond the power of this Court—and more about the impact of their allegations on People’s faith in the democratic process and their trust in our government.” The plaintiffs petitioned for a writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court on December 11, 2020, and then filed a motion for expedited consideration a week later. On January 11, 2020, the Court denied the plaintiffs’ motion to expedite without issuing an opinion. A few days later, the respondents filed their briefs in opposition to the petition. In their briefs, the respondents argued that the petitioners’ appeal of their denied motion for a preliminary injunction to prevent counting Michigan’s electoral votes should be dismissed as moot, and that the petitioners were, in any case, not entitled to the injunction because they did not demonstrate a strong likelihood of success on the merits of their claims that the 2020 General Election in Michigan had violated the Equal Protection, Due Process, and Electors and Elections Clauses. 

Moore v. Circosta, Nos. 20A71, 20A72 (S. Ct.)
(fraud and vote dilution claims)

Complaint Filed: September 26, 2020

State: North Carolina

Current Status or Final Disposition:  Emergency Applications for Injunction (October 22, 2020); Applications for Injunctive Relief Denied (October 28, 2012)

Summary: Individual voters, the Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives, and the President Pro Tempore of the North Carolina Senate sued the Chair of the North Carolina State Board of Elections in federal court, challenging a consent judgment in North Carolina Alliance of Retired Americans v. State of North Carolina. Plaintiffs argued that the Board infringed on the legislature’s authority by setting new “Times” and “Manners” for elections as part of the consent judgment, and that the new procedures violate the Fourteenth Amendment and the Elections Clause by not only changing the time and manner of holding federal elections, but also by denying equal protections to voters who had already cast their ballots. The new “Times” and “Manners” included an extension of the absentee ballot receipt deadline, a provision allowing voters with notice and opportunity to cure ballot defects even after Election Day, and a provision not to reject ballots dropped off at ballot boxes by third parties. The District Court declined to enjoin the consent judgment, as did the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. Plaintiffs appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, seeking an emergency stay. On October 28, the Supreme Court denied the application in a 5-3 decision, leaving in place the extended deadline for receiving absentee ballots after the election. After the election, the Supreme Court is expected to take up the merits of plaintiffs’ arguments that the Board did not have the authority to agree to extend the deadline for accepting absentee ballots.

In re: Canvassing Observation, No. 20-845 (S. Ct.)
(fraud and vote dilution)

Complaint Filed: November 3, 2020

State: Pennsylvania

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion for Expedited Consideration Denied (January 11, 2021); Case Distributed for Conference Scheduled for February 19, 2021 (January 27, 2021)

Summary: President Trump’s campaign committee petitioned to allow campaign representatives to more closely observe the canvassing of ballots in Philadelphia County. The Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Election Court below had denied the motion. The committee claimed that the Philadelphia County Board of Elections had configured their ballot-canvassing tables in a manner that made it difficult to observe the process by candidates, candidates’ representatives, and watchers. The Board countered that so long as observers were permitted to be present in the canvassing room, they had an opportunity to observe the canvassing process as required by the state’s Election Code. The Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania reversed, finding that the intent of the relevant portion of the Election Code was to provide an opportunity for “meaningful observation,” and that this opportunity had been denied to observers in Philadelphia County. On November 5, the defendants filed an emergency petition of appeal in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court granted the petition on the issues of: (1) whether the Philadelphia Board of Elections had complied with the Election Code; (2) whether the allowance of appeal was moot; and (3) if the appeal is moot, whether there remained a substantial question capable of repetition yet evading review that was exempted from the mootness doctrine. Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court reversed the decision of the Commonwealth Court, thereby reinstating the trial court’s order denying former-president Trump’s campaign committee the relief it had initially sought. Following this defeat in what had been a key battleground state during the 2020 General Election, the campaign petitioned for writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court in December and filed an accompanying motion for expedited consideration. While the motion to expedite was denied on January 11, 2021, the petition is still pending review, and the case was distributed for conference on January 27, 2021 along with several other election cases. The conference is scheduled for February 19. 

Bognet v. Degraffenreid, No. 20-740 (S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: October 22, 2020

State: Pennsylvania

Current Status or Final Disposition: Judgment of Third Circuit Vacated (April 19, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiffs, republican candidate for Pennsylvania’s 8th Congressional District Jim Bognet and several individual voters, sought a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against the Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth. Plaintiffs filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, alleging that the Secretary had violated the Elections Clause, Presidential Electors Clause, and Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The main issue presented was whether the Pennsylvania Supreme Court usurped the power of the state legislature in Pennsylvania Democratic Party v. Boockvar. In that decision, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court had permitted absentee ballots to be counted after Election Day, so long as they were received by 5:00 PM on Friday, November 6, 2020. The District Court denied plaintiffs’ motion for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction, and plaintiffs appealed. The Third Circuit affirmed the district court’s decision, and plaintiffs petitioned for writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court. The Court granted the petition, but in the same order vacated the Third Circuit’s judgment with instructions to dismiss the case as moot.

Kelly v. Pennsylvania, No. 20A98 (S. Ct.)
(fraud and vote dilution)

Complaint Filed: November 21, 2020

State: Pennsylvania

Current Status or Final Disposition: Distributed for Conference Scheduled February 19, 2021 (January 20, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiffs, Republican candidates for the U.S. and Pennsylvania Houses of Representatives and individual voters, filed suit after the November 3 Election against the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the Pennsylvania General Assembly, as well as state officials. The plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment that portions of Pennsylvania’s Act 77, which provided for universal mail-in absentee ballots, were unconstitutional. The plaintiffs also requested an injunction prohibiting Pennsylvania’s certification of the November 3 election results. The Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania granted a preliminary injunction on November 25, 2020 to enjoin the certification of any remaining election results in the state. Defendant Secretary of the Commonwealth Boockvar applied to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to exercise extraordinary jurisdiction to hear the case. A few days later, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court vacated the Commonwealth Court’s preliminary injunction in a per curiam decision. In a concurring statement, Justice Wecht noted that the plaintiffs “have failed to allege that even a single mail-in ballot was fraudulently cast or counted,” thereby rendering the extraordinary relief sought entirely inappropriate. The plaintiffs filed an emergency application for writ of injunction with the U.S. Supreme Court on December 3. On December 8, the Supreme Court denied the emergency application in a one-sentence order. Following this denial, the plaintiffs then petitioned for writ of certiorari on December 11, 2020, and simultaneously filed a motion for expedited consideration. Twenty-eight U.S. House members filed a brief in support of the petitioners. The Court denied the motion for expedited consideration on January 11, 2021, but distributed the case for conference on January 20, 2021. The conference is scheduled for February 19, 2021.

Common Cause Rhode Island v. Gorbea, No. 20A28 (S. Ct.)
(witness and notary requirements for voting by mail)

Complaint Filed: July 23, 2020

State: Rhode Island

Current Status or Final Disposition: Application for Stay of District Court’s Order Approving Consent Decree Judgment Denied (August 13, 2020)

Summary: Common Cause Rhode Island, the Republican National Committee, and others filed suit against Rhode Island Secretary of State Gorbea and members of the state board of elections. The plaintiffs claimed that a state law requiring that absentee ballots be signed by two witnesses or a notary violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments and the Americans with Disabilities Act. Plaintiffs argued that the notary or witness requirement for absentee ballots unduly burdens the right to vote in the midst of a pandemic without additional accommodations. On July 30, the parties entered into a consent decree suspending the notary or witness requirement for the primary and the November Election. The Republican National Committee moved the First Circuit and then the Supreme Court to stay the consent decree. The Supreme Court denied the stay, reasoning that this case differed from People First of Alabama v. Merrill, because here the state elections officials support a consent decree and did not oppose temporarily suspending the witness requirement. The Court further noted that the RNC lacked a substantial interest in enforcing Rhode Island’s laws in this case, especially because the witness requirement had not been in place in the most recent election.

Middleton v. Andino, No. 20A55 (S. Ct.)
(witness and notary requirements for voting by mail)

Complaint Filed: May 1, 2020

State: South Carolina

Current Status or Final Disposition: Order Granting Stay (October 5, 2020)

Summary: Individual voters, the Democratic National Committee, and the South Carolina Democratic Party sued members of the South Carolina State Election Commission, alleging that certain state laws restricting who can vote absentee and requiring a witness signature on absentee ballot envelopes violated the First, Fourteenth, Twenty-Fourth, and Twenty-Sixth Amendments, as well as the Voting Rights Act. Plaintiffs asserted that these restrictions abridged the right to vote on the basis of age, discriminated against voters on the basis of race or color, imposed a poll tax, unduly burdened the right to vote, and were preempted by the Voting Rights Act. The Fourth Circuit granted a preliminary injunction enjoining only the enforcement of the witness signature requirement for absentee ballots for the November 2020 election. The Supreme Court stayed the injunction on October 5, thereby reinstating the witness-signature requirement. The Supreme Court reasoned that (1) the Constitution entrusts the protection of citizens’ health to the state governments; and (2) federal courts should not alter state election rules close to an election except in extraordinary circumstances.

Texas v. Pennsylvania, No. 220155 (S. Ct.)
(fraud and vote dilution)

Complaint Filed: December 7, 2020

State: Texas

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion for Leave to File Bill of Complaint Denied (December 11, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiff, the state of Texas, moved for leave to file a bill of complaint with the U.S. Supreme Court against the states of Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan, and Wisconsin over their allegedly improper administration of the 2020 presidential election. The plaintiff alleged that non-legislative actors had amended state election laws; that voters in Democratic strongholds in the defendant states had received more favorable treatment; and that there were voting irregularities as a result of a lack of proper ballot-integrity protections. The Supreme Court denied the motion, holding that Texas lacked standing under Article III of the Constitution. “Texas has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another State conducts its elections,” the Court wrote.

Gohmert v. PenceNo. 20A115 (S. Ct.)
(Electoral College)

Complaint Filed: December 27, 2020

State: Texas

Current Status or Final Disposition: Emergency Application to U.S. Supreme Court for Administrative Stay and Interim Relief Denied (January 7, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiffs, U.S. Representative Gohmert from Texas and a group of Republican Presidential Electors for Arizona, filed suit against Vice President Pence.  Plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of the Electoral County Act of 1887, and sought a declaration that Pence had the authority to reject some of the electoral votes in favor of President-elect Biden, and introduce alternative slates of electoral votes for Trump in their place.  The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas dismissed the case, finding that the plaintiffs did not have standing under Article III because the alleged injury was based on a purely hypothetical series of events.  Plaintiffs appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.  The Fifth Circuit affirmed the district court’s decision to dismiss in a per curiam opinion.  Without expressing any opinion on the underlying merits of the case, the Fifth Circuit held that the district court lacked jurisdiction to hear the plaintiffs’ case because they did not have standing to bring the claim.  The plaintiffs then filed an emergency application to the Supreme Court for an administrative stay and interim relief pending the resolution of a filed petition for a writ of certiorari.  Without issuing an opinion, the Supreme Court denied the emergency application.

Democratic National Committee v. Wisconsin State Legislature, Nos. 20A64, 20A65, 20A66 (S. Ct.)
(voter registration deadlines)

Complaint Filed: March 18, 2020

State: Wisconsin

Current Status or Final Disposition: Emergency Application to Vacate Stay Denied (October 26, 2020)

Summary: The DNC and the Democratic Party of Wisconsin sued state elections commissioners ahead of the April 7, 2020 Wisconsin Spring Election, alleging that Wisconsin’s procedures for registering to vote and absentee voting violate due process. The amended complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief alleged that, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, Wisconsin laws unduly burden voters’ right to vote under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, violating procedural due process and equal protection. The District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin granted the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction in part by: (1) extending the voter registration deadline for the Spring Election from March 18 to March 30, 2020; (2) extending the voter registration deadline for the November 3 Election from October 14 to October 21; (3) extending the deadline for accepting absentee ballots in the November 3 Election that are postmarked by the date of the Election to November 9, 2020; (4) lifting a ban on delivery of absentee ballots for domestic civilian voters, thus allowing online access to request replacement absentee ballots for an additional week; and (5) temporarily eliminating residency requirements for poll workers. On October 6, the Wisconsin Supreme Court issued an opinion in response to a certified question from the Seventh Circuit finding that the Wisconsin Legislature could represent the state’s interests on appeal. Following that, the Seventh Circuit, in a per curiam decision, stayed the District Court’s injunction on October 8 as to the extended deadlines for voter registration and receipt of absentee ballots for the November 3 Election. The plaintiffs’ emergency application to vacate the Seventh Circuit’s stay was denied by the Supreme Court on October 26, 2020, reasoning that state legislatures bear primary responsibility for setting election rules.

Republican National Committee v. Democratic National Committee, No. 19A1016 (S. Ct.); Nos. 20-1538, 20-1539, 20-1545, 20-1546, 20-2835 (7th Cir.)
(absentee ballot deadlines)

Complaint Filed: Application for Stay Filed April 4, 2020

State: Wisconsin

Current Status or Final Disposition: Application for Stay Granted by U.S. Supreme Court (April 6, 2020); Preliminary Injunction Granted in Part and Denied in Part by U.S. District Court, Western District of Wisconsin (September 21, 2020); Stay of Preliminary Injunction Granted by Seventh Circuit (October 8, 2020)

Summary: The Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Party of Wisconsin sued state elections commissioners over various state laws restricting absentee voting ahead of the state’s April 7, 2020 election that included the presidential primary. Plaintiffs alleged that defendants had violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments by unduly burdening the right to vote, denying procedural due process, and denying equal protection; the District Court agreed and enjoined the restrictions on. The Supreme Court stayed the District Court’s order on April 6, finding that the relief ordered as to the deadline for submitting absentee ballots contradicted the general rule that lower federal courts should not change election rules close to an election. Then, ahead of the November 2020 Election, the District Court entered a preliminary injunction extending the deadline for voter registration to October 21 and extending the absentee ballot receipt deadline to November 9 for all ballots postmarked by November 3. The Seventh Circuit stayed the District Court’s injunction on October 8.

In re Feehan, No. 20-859 (S. Ct.)
(Electoral College)

Complaint Filed: December 1, 2020

State: Wisconsin

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition for Writ of Mandamus Denied (March 1, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiffs, a Presidential Elector and a Republican nominee for the U.S. House of Representatives, sued the Wisconsin Elections Commission and Wisconsin Governor Evers to challenge the results of the November 3 general election. The plaintiffs sought declaratory, emergency, and permanent injunctive relief from the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin and decertification of Wisconsin’s presidential election results. They claimed that state election officials had violated the Elections and Electors Clauses of the U.S. Constitution and 42 USC 1983 by violating state election law. Specifically, the plaintiffs alleged that election officials had counted absentee ballots with missing information; given preference to absentee and mail-in voters; and counted fraudulent ballots. The district court granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss the action, finding that the plaintiffs lacked Article III standing to bring their claims, and that “most of the relief the plaintiff seeks is beyond this court’s ability to redress absent the mythical time machine.” The Presidential Elector, Feehan, filed an emergency petition for extraordinary writ of mandamus with the U.S. Supreme Court on December 15, 2020. On January 11, 2021, the Court issued an order without opinion denying the motion to expedite consideration. Similarly, the Court denied the petition for writ of mandamus altogether without issuing an opinion on March 1, 2021.

Trump v. Biden, No. 20-882 (S. Ct.)
(fraud and vote dilution)

Complaint Filed: December 3, 2020

State: Wisconsin

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition for Writ of Certiorari Denied (February 22, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiffs former President Trump, former Vice President Pence, and Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. appealed from the vote recounts in Dane and Milwaukee Counties—two democratic strongholds in the state—against then President-elect Biden, Vice President-elect Harris, and state elections officials. The plaintiffs alleged that thousands of absentee ballots were defective and had been cast improperly in violation of Wisconsin law. The plaintiffs claimed that absentee ballots had been submitted without the requisite written applications; that certification envelopes for the ballots were incomplete or had been altered; that voters who did not qualify to vote by absentee ballot as being “indefinitely confined” due to disability or illness had done so; and that ballots cast during “Democracy in the Park” events were not properly mailed or delivered to the municipal clerk issuing the ballots. The Milwaukee County Circuit Court denied the plaintiffs relief from the recount determination in favor of Biden. Reserve Judge Simanek said from the bench: “The bottom line here is that the court should do everything to ensure that the will of the voters prevail[s].” Trump appealed the unfavorable ruling directly to the Wisconsin Supreme Court. In a four-to-three vote, the state’s Supreme Court affirmed the Milwaukee County Circuit Court’s decision to deny relief. The majority concluded that plaintiffs’ request to discard the ballots of indefinitely confined voters as a class was without merit, and that the plaintiffs’ claims were barred by laches since they had not been brought before Election Day.  Following this defeat, the plaintiffs filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court on December 29 2020, along with a motion for expedited consideration.  The Court denied the motion for expedited consideration on January 11, 2021, but distributed the case for a conference on January 27.  Following the February 19 conference, the Court denied the petition on February 22, 2021.

Trump v. Wisconsin Elections Commission, No. 20-883 (S. Ct)
(fraud and vote dilution)

Complaint Filed: December 2, 2020

State: Wisconsin

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition for Writ of Certiorari Denied (March 8, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiff, former President Trump, sued the Wisconsin Elections Commission, its members, and other state elections officials over the administration of the November 3 presidential election. Specifically, the plaintiff alleged that the state elections officials had violated his rights under the Electors Clause of Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution by issuing guidance on state election law during the coronavirus pandemic that illegally deviated from state statutes. The plaintiff requested that the court order the Wisconsin governor to essentially discard the state election results and appoint presidential electors in an alternative manner. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that it failed to state a claim and that the court lacked jurisdiction. The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin determined that it had jurisdiction to hear the claims, but dismissed the complaint on the merits, finding that the presidential electors were being properly appointed under the U.S. Constitution. Remarking on the unusual nature of the case, the court stated that a “sitting president who did not prevail in his bid for reelection has asked for federal court help in setting aside the popular vote based on disputed issues of election administration, issues he plainly could have raised before the vote occurred.” President Trump appealed, and the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s decision to deny relief. The Seventh Circuit agreed with the district court that Wisconsin had lawfully appointed its presidential electors, and that the president’s claim was untimely. Following the Seventh’s Circuit decision, the plaintiffs filed a petition for writ of certiorari and a motion to expedite consideration with the U.S. Supreme Court. The Court denied the motion to expedite on January 11, 2021.  Several respondents filed waivers of their right to file responses to the petition between January 15 and January 27. On March 8, the Court denied the petition, ending the last of the former president’s election challenges in the Supreme Court.

Absentee Ballot Deadlines

In re: Enforcement of Election Laws and Securing Ballots Cast or Received After 7:00 p.m. on November 3, 2020No. SPCV20-00982-J3 (Sup. Ct. Chatham)

Complaint Filed: November 4, 2020

State: Georgia

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition Dismissed (November 5, 2020)

Summary: The Georgia Republican Party and President Trump’s campaign committee filed a Petition to Command Enforcement of Election Laws with the Superior Court of Chatham County. The petitioners alleged that the Chatham County Board of Elections had failed to safely store absentee ballots received after 7:00 p.m. on Election Day, November 3, and that such ballots should have been disqualified because they arrived after the absentee ballot deadline. The court dismissed the petition, finding no evidence that ballots had arrived after the 7:00 p.m. deadline on Election Day, nor any evidence that the Chatham County Board of Elections had not complied with election laws.

Grossman v. Galvin, No. SJC-2020-XX (Mass. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: August 17, 2020

State: Massachusetts

Current Status or Final Disposition: Relief Denied (August 26, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs sued the Secretary of the Commonwealth alleging a state law requiring that absentee ballots for the primary be received by Election Day, September 1, 2020, violated the Massachusetts and U.S. Constitutions. In a one-line opinion, the Massachusetts Supreme Court held that the September 1 deadline for accepting absentee ballots for the primary was not unconstitutional.

Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. v. Benson, No. 20-000225-MZ (Mich. Ct. Claims)

Complaint Filed: November 4, 2020

State: Michigan

Current Status or Final Disposition: Application for Leave to Appeal Denied (December 4, 2020)

Summary: President Trump’s campaign committee and an individual voter trained as an election challenger sued Michigan Secretary of State Benson. The plaintiffs alleged that Benson had violated the equal protection clause of the state constitution, the constitution’s “purity of elections” clause, and a state statute providing for election inspectors to be present at Absent Voter Counting Boards by failing to properly oversee the Counting Boards or providing for video surveillance of absentee ballot drop boxes. The plaintiffs averred in their complaint that the individual election challenger had been excluded from the Counting Board during the absentee ballot review process, but no further details were provided by the plaintiffs. They asked the Michigan Court of Claims to halt all counting of absentee ballots until an “election inspector” from each of the major political parties was present at every Absent Voter Counting Board, and to order Benson to segregate all ballots that were not “being inspected and monitored as required by law.” The court denied the plaintiffs’ motion for declaratory relief, finding that vague allegations that an unnamed local election official had barred an election challenger from a Counting Board could not provide the basis for issuing an injunction against Benson. Additionally, the statute providing for video surveillance only applied to drop boxes installed after October 1, 2020. The court also found that the plaintiffs’ request was moot, since the complaint had not been filed until the afternoon of November 4, when the vote counting in Michigan had largely been completed. The campaign committee filed a motion for immediate consideration of appeal with the Michigan Court of Appeals on November 6, and filed a brief in support on November 30. On December 4, in a two-to-one vote, the Michigan court of Appeals denied the plaintiff’s motion for leave to appeal. The court noted that the campaign did not discuss the impact of the Michigan Board of State Canvassers’ certification of the presidential election results on November 23 in its brief, which had “clearly rendered plaintiff’s claims for relief moot.”

League of Women Voters of Michigan v. Benson, No. 161671 (Mich. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: May 22, 2020

State: Michigan

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion for Reconsideration Denied (September 11, 2020)

Summary: The League of Women Voters of Michigan and individual voters sued Michigan Secretary of State Benson to challenge the state’s law requiring that election officials reject filled-out absentee ballots that arrived after Election Day. Plaintiffs alleged the requirement was no longer valid after the Michigan Constitution was amended to give every voter the right to submit an absentee ballot at any time, without stating a reason, within the 40 days preceding a primary or general election. Plaintiffs sought a writ of mandamus from the Michigan Court of Appeals to order election officials to accept absentee ballots cast in the August 4 primary that were postmarked by Election Day and received within six days of the primary. On July 14, 2020, the Court of Appeals denied the writ, holding that the law setting the deadline for accepting absentee ballots did not violate the amended Michigan Constitution. Plaintiffs then sought leave to appeal to the Michigan Supreme Court, which was denied, as was their subsequent motion for reconsideration.

NAACP of Minnesota v. Simon, No. A20-1041 (Minn. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: June 4, 2020

State: Minnesota

Current Status or Final Disposition: Stipulation to Dismiss Appeals (August 18, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs, the NAACP of Minnesota and individual voters, sued the Minnesota Secretary of State over a state law requiring that: (1) absentee ballots be witnessed by Minnesota voter, notary, or other person authorized to administer oaths, and (2) hand-delivered absentee ballots be received by 3:00 p.m. on Election Day, and all mailed absentee ballots by 8:00 pm. The plaintiffs initially alleged that these laws violated both the state and U.S. Constitutions by denying procedural due process to voters. After settlements and partial consent decrees, plaintiffs agreed with defendants to voluntarily dismiss their appeals.

LaRose v. Simon, No. A20-1040 (Minn. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: May 13, 2020

State: Minnesota

Current Status or Final Disposition: Stipulation to Dismiss Appeals (August 18, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs sued the Minnesota Secretary of State, challenging two state laws as unconstitutional under both the Minnesota and U.S. Constitutions: (1) that absentee ballots must be witnessed by a registered Minnesota voter, notary, or other person authorized to administer oaths, and (2) and that hand-delivered absentee ballots must be received by 3:00 p.m. on Election Day, and all mailed absentee ballots by 8:00 p.m. The plaintiffs requested a declaratory judgment that the two laws were invalid, and an injunction preventing the Secretary of State from enforcing the laws. The parties ultimately stipulated to dismiss the appeals after two settlements and partial consent decrees satisfied plaintiffs’ demands for both the primary and general elections.

Driscoll v. Stapleton, No. OP20-0293, DA20-0295 (Mont. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: March 13, 2020

State: Montana

Current Status or Final Disposition: Preliminary Injunction Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part (September 29, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs sued Montana Secretary of State, challenging the deadline requirement of 8 p.m. on Election Day for the receipt of absentee ballots, claiming that this requirement imposed an undue burden on the right to vote and denied voters due process under the Montana Constitution. The Secretary of State petitioned the Montana Supreme Court for a stay of a Montana ccourt’s injunction of the deadline requirement, which the Montana Supreme Court granted. The Montana Supreme Court ultimately vacated thcounty court’s injunction extending the deadline and reinstated the original deadline, finding that the preliminary injunction would only cause more confusion for voters and, further, that it did not violate the state constitution.

Ohio Dep’t of Health v. LaRose, No. 2020-0388 (Ohio S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: March 17, 2020

State: Ohio

Current Status or Final Disposition: Case Dismissed (March 31, 2020)

Summary: The day before Ohio’s March primary, the Ohio Department of Health ordered that polling places be closed, and the Secretary of State LaRose issued a directive to extend the deadline for absentee voting through June 1, with in-person voting originally postponed to June 2. The Ohio Democratic Party and the Libertarian Party sued, challenging the Secretary of State’s power to set a new election date and seeking an order directing the Boards of Elections to make various arrangements for prepaid postage of absentee ballots, additional assistance for absentee and disabled voters, and further extend the time for voting. The General Assembly then passed an act voiding the Secretary of State’s directive, and the court dismissed the Ohio Democratic Party’s case at its request. The Ohio Supreme Court then dismissed the Libertarian Party’s remaining claims, finding that the case was moot after the Secretary’s directive was rescinded.

Barnette v. Lawrence, No. 2:20-cv-05477 (E.D. Pa.)

Complaint Filed: November 3, 2020

State: Pennsylvania

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion for Temporary Restraining Order Denied, Motions to Intervene of Democratic National Committee and Pennsylvania Democratic Party Granted (November 6, 2020)

Summary: Barnette, a candidate for Pennsylvania Congress, and others sued the Chair of Montgomery County Board of Elections Lawrence and other elections officials, alleging that the Board of Elections was violating the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by pre-canvassing absentee ballots prior to 7:00 a.m. on Election Day. The plaintiffs sought a temporary restraining order from the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania to enjoin the defendants from pre-canvassing ballots before Election Day and from contacting any voters to notify them of defective ballots. The plaintiffs then withdrew their motion for a temporary restraining order given that a related case was pending a hearing in Pennsylvania state court on November 6. The district court consequently denied the motion for a temporary restraining order. 

Accommodations for Disabled Voters

Indiana Vote by Mail, Inc. v. Okeson, No. 20-02605 (7th Cir.)

Complaint Filed: April 29, 2020

State: Indiana

Current Status or Final Disposition: Seventh Circuit Affirmed District Court’s Denial of Injunction (October 6, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs sought a preliminary injunction to enjoin the enforcement of a state law stating that voters may only vote by mail under a list of enumerated excuses. The plaintiffs argued that any voter, not just the disabled, military, or seniors, should be permitted to vote by mail in the November 2020 election in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. The District Court denied the injunction, and the Seventh Circuit affirmed, finding that the state’s voting laws did not interfere with plaintiffs’ right to vote and did not violate the U.S. Constitution.

Drenth v. BoockvarNo. 1:20-cv-00829 (M.D. Penn.)

Complaint Filed: May 21, 2020

State: Pennsylvania

Current Status or Final Disposition: Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment Granted (August 18, 2020)

Summary: The vice president of the National Federation of the Blind of Pennsylvania and the organization itself sued Secretary of the Commonwealth Boockvar, challenging the state’s refusal to give disabled voters the option to receive their mail-in ballots online, as allowed for members of the military. Plaintiffs alleged that the refusal to grant these accommodations to disabled voters violates the Americans with Disabilities Act. The U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment after the parties reached an agreement to implement a remote ballot marking system for the November 2020 Election.

Ballot Drop Boxes

A. Philip Randolph Inst. of Ohio v. LaRose, Nos. 20-4063, 20-4068 (6th Cir.)

Complaint Filed: August 26, 2020

State: Ohio

Current Status or Final Disposition: Stay Pending Appeal Granted (October 9, 2020); Case Nos. 20-4063 and 20-4068 Consolidated (October 15, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs, the A. Philip Randolph Institute of Ohio, the League of Women Voters of Ohio, the Ohio State Conference of the NAACP, and individual voters, challenged Ohio Secretary of State LaRose’s directive limiting each county in the state to one drop box for absentee applications and ballots for the 2020 general election, alleging the directive violates the right to vote under the First and Fourteenth Amendments and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The District Court for the Northern District of Ohio enjoined the Secretary from enforcing the one-drop box limit, ruling that state law permits county election officials to install additional drop boxes in each county and to allow staff to collect absentee ballots off-site. The Sixth Circuit stayed the District Court’s ruling pending appeal, citing Supreme Court and Sixth Circuit Precedent to support its conclusion that the stay was in the public interest and that federal courts should generally not alter state election rules during an election.

Texas League of United Latin American Citizens v. Abbott, No. 20-50867 (5th Cir.)

Complaint Filed: October 1, 2020

State: Texas

Current Status or Final Disposition: Stay Pending Appeal Granted (October 12, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs, the Texas League of United Latin American Citizens, the League of Women Voters of Texas, and others sued Texas Governor Abbott, challenging the validity of the governor’s order limiting absentee ballot drop box locations to one per county under the First and Fourteenth Amendments and the Voting Rights Act. Plaintiffs argued that the governor’s order unduly burdens the right to vote and deprives voters of equal protection since each county, regardless of population size, is limited to a single drop box. The District Court for the Western District of Texas entered an injunction barring election officials from enforcing the governor’s order to limit each county to one absentee ballot drop box. On appeal, the Fifth Circuit held that the District Court had misapplied the Anderson-Burdick balancing test for voting-rights claims, and concluded that the drop box limit did not impose any burden on Texans’ right to vote. Additionally, the Fifth Circuit noted that voting rights had been expanded under the COVID-19 pandemic by (1) extending the timeframe for early voting by six days, and (2) permitting absentee ballots to be delivered up to forty extra days prior to Election Day.

Hotze v. Hollins, No. 20-0863 (Tex. S. Ct.); No. 4:20-cv-3709 (S.D. Tex.)

Complaint Filed: October 28, 2020

State: Texas

Current Status or Final Disposition: Writ of Mandamus Denied by Texas Supreme Court (November 1, 2020); Complaint for Injunctive Relief Dismissed by U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas (November 2, 2020)

Summary: The Republican Party of Texas and Republican activists sued Harris County Clerk Hollins and others over “drive-through” voting in Harris County, Texas. Harris County is home to the city of Houston and is Texas’ most populous county. The plaintiffs challenged the legality of approximately 127,000 votes cast at drive-through voting sites in the county during the early voting period. The plaintiffs claimed that drive-through voting was an illegal expansion of curbside voting under the “Elections Clause” of the U.S. Constitution, because only curbside voting, not drive-through voting, is allegedly allowed under Texas law. The defendants countered that drive-through polling places are not governed by the curbside voting statutes and that the plaintiffs, who were not the state legislature, lacked standing to bring suit under the Elections Clause. The plaintiffs sought emergency injunctive relief via a writ of mandamus filed in the Texas Supreme Court, which the Court denied. The plaintiffs also simultaneously filed a complaint seeking emergency and permanent injunctive relief in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas on the additional basis that Harris County’s drive-through voting process violated the 14th Amendment to the federal constitution.  Following an emergency hearing on the morning of November 2, the District Court denied plaintiffs’ motion the same day on the basis that the plaintiffs lacked standing, and also noting that the suit was untimely since drive-through voting had been in place in Harris County for the Texas primary in the summer of 2020.

Restrictions on Voting by Mail

Kistner v. Simon, No. A20-1486 (Minn. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: November 24, 2020

State: Minnesota

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition to Correct Errors and Omissions Dismissed (December 4, 2020)

Summary: Petitioners, a group of Republican candidates for state and national representative seats, sought a temporary restraining order enjoining the Minnesota Canvassing Board from certifying the November 3, 2020 election from the Minnesota Supreme Court. The petitioners alleged that the respondents—Minnesota Secretary of State Simon and members of the State Canvassing Board—had violated the U.S. and Minnesota constitutions through improper election procedures and post-election reviews. In particular, the petitioners took issue with suspension of the witness requirement for absentee and mail-in ballots. The Minnesota Supreme Court dismissed all three of the petitioners’ claims, finding that the first two were time-barred and should have been asserted prior to the November 3 election (including the claim that the suspension of the witness requirement for mail-in ballots was unconstitutional), and that the third claim concerning post-election reviews must be dismissed because the petition had not been properly served on any county election officials as required by state statute.

League of Women Voters of Ohio v. LaRose, No. 2:20-cv-03843 (S.D. Ohio)

Complaint Filed: July 31, 2020

State: Ohio

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion for Preliminary Injunction Denied (September 27, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs, the League of Women Voters of Ohio, the A. Philip Randolph Institute of Ohio, and individual voters sued Ohio Secretary of State LaRose, alleging that state laws requiring elections officials to compare voter signatures on absentee ballots with their voter registration records, with no statewide standards for doing so, violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The plaintiffs sought to enjoin LaRose from enforcing those provisions of the law that require elections officials to engage in signature matching without providing enough time for voters to cure any defects. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio denied injunctive relief, finding that plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed in proving that the signature-matching process was unconstitutional.

Memphis A. Phillip Randolph Institute v. Hargett, No. 20-06046 (6th Cir.)

Complaint Filed: May 1, 2020

State: Tennessee

Current Status or Final Disposition: District Court’s Order Affirmed (October 15, 2020)

Summary: The Memphis A. Philip Randolph Institute and others sued Tennessee Secretary of State Hagett and others, challenging state laws that prevent voters from voting absentee unless they meet certain limited criteria, which do not include concerns about COVID-19. On appeal, the Sixth Circuit, in a divided opinion, held that the plaintiffs did not have standing to bring their claims.

Lewis v. Hughs, No. 20-50654 (5th Cir.)

Complaint Filed: May 11, 2020

State: Texas

Current Status or Final Disposition: Denial of Motion to Dismiss Affirmed (September 4, 2020); Order Withdrawing Previous Order Affirming Denial of Motion to Dismiss (October 2, 2020)

Summary: Individual Texas voters, Voto Latino, and others sued Texas Secretary of State Hughs to challenge the constitutionality of various state laws in light of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Such provisions included (1) that voters pay for the postage required to return their early voting ballots by mail; and (2) that voters submit two “matching” handwriting samples. The plaintiffs alleged that the signature-matching requirement violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments by unduly burdening the right to vote. Hughs filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds of sovereign immunity, which the Fifth Circuit denied on September 4, 2020. The Fifth Circuit then, without elaboration, withdrew its September 4 Order on October 2, 2020.

Texas Democratic Party v. Abbott, Nos. 19A1055, 19-1389 (S. Ct.), No. 20-50407 (5th Cir.)

Complaint Filed: April 7, 2020; Amended Complaint Filed April 29, 2020

State: Texas

Current Status or Final Disposition: U.S. Supreme Court Denied Motion to Expedite Consideration (July 2, 2020); Fifth Circuit Remanded to District Court (September 10, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs the Texas Democratic Party, Chair of the Texas Democratic Party, and individual voters filed suit against Texas Governor Abbott, alleging that a Texas statute permitting only individuals aged 65 years or older to vote by mail without excuse constituted age discrimination in violation of the Twenty-Sixth Amendment. The plaintiffs initially asked the District Court for the Western District of Texas for a preliminary injunction to (1) declare that the Texas Election Code’s definition of “disability” as it relates to mail-in voting encompasses all registered voters during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, and (2) order that all mail-in ballots, regardless of reason for voting by mail, be tabulated in the final election results. The District Court granted the plaintiffs’ preliminary injunction, finding that no rational basis existed for differentiating voters without a disability aged 65 and older and voters younger than 65. The Supreme Court denied a motion to expedite consideration of the petition for a writ of certiorari. On appeal from the District Court, the Fifth Circuit vacated and remanded the District Court’s grant of the preliminary injunction, holding that the Texas statute survived the constitutional challenge under the Twenty-Sixth Amendment’s prohibition against denying the right to vote based on age.

Electoral College

Trump v. Kemp, No. 1:20-cv-05310 (N.D. Ga.)

Complaint Filed: December 31, 2020

State: Georgia

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief Denied (January 5, 2021); Notice of Voluntary Dismissal Filed (January 7, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiff President Trump sued Georgia Governor Kemp and Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger seeking an emergency injunction from the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia to decertify the Georgia election results. Trump alleged violations of Article II and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, claiming that illegal votes had been certified in the November 3 General Election. The District Court denied Trump’s motion for declaratory and injunctive relief on January 5, 2021, finding that (1) the court lacked jurisdiction to grant Trump the relief sought, and (2) Trump failed to establish the substantial likelihood of success on the merits of his claims under both the Electors Clause and the Due Process Clause. Two days later, Trump filed a notice of voluntary dismissal of the suit.

Still v. Raffensperger, No. 2020CV343711 (Fulton Cty. Sup. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: December 12, 2020

State: Georgia

Current Status or Final Disposition: Notice of Voluntary Dismissal Filed (January 7, 2021)

Summary: Petitioner Still, an individual Official Presidential Elector, and a Jane Doe petitioned against Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger and the Coffee County Board of Elections and Registration. The petitioners alleged that the respondents had violated Georgia law and the Georgia Constitution in their administration of the November 3, 2020 General Election. The petitioners asked the Fulton County Superior Court to decertify the election results in Coffee County, Georgia and the presidential election results across the state. On January 7, 2021, the petitioners filed a notice of voluntary dismissal of the suit.

Trump v. Raffensperger, No. (Fulton Cty. Sup. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: December 4, 2020

State: Georgia

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition Dismissed (December 12, 2020); Notice of Voluntary Dismissal Filed (January 5, 2021)

Summary: Petitioners President Trump, his election campaign committee, and Presidential Elector Shafer petitioned to contest Georgia’s presidential election results, naming Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger and dozens of election officials as respondents. The petitioners alleged several election irregularities. A few days after filing the petition, petitioners filed an emergency motion for injunctive relief, and a second motion for injunctive relief two days later. The Fulton County Superior Court ordered that the action would proceed in the normal course. Petitioners then filed an emergency petition for writ of certiorari to the Georgia Supreme Court. The Georgia Supreme Court dismissed the petition on December 12, 2020. On January 5, 2021, the petitioners filed a notice of voluntary dismissal.

Boland v. Raffensperger, No. S21M0565 (S. Ct. Ga.)

Complaint Filed: November 30, 2020

State: Georgia

Current Status or Final Disposition: Appeal Denied (December 14, 2020); Notice of Voluntary Dismissal Filed (January 7, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiff Boland, an individual voter, filed suit against Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger and election officials to contest the November 3, 2020 General Election in Georgia. Plaintiff alleged that there was data showing that more than 20,000 ballots had been cast by individuals who were no longer Georgia residents, and showing that counties had not screened for mismatched and absent signatures on absentee ballots as required by law. Boland sought equitable relief in the form of (1) an audit of the voter rolls to confirm that they had been maintained as required under Georgia election law, and (2) a verification that all envelopes used to submit absentee ballots could be matched with valid voter signatures. The Superior Court of Fulton County granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss on December 8, 2020, holding that the defendants were not the proper parties to an election contest and that plaintiff’s complaint was moot because the election results in Georgia had already been certified. Plaintiff appealed, but the Supreme Court of Georgia denied the appeal without issuing an opinion.

Felon Voting Rights

Jones v. DeSantis, No. 19A1071 (S. Ct.); No. 20-12003-AA (11th Cir.)

Complaint Filed: June 28, 2019

State: Florida

Current Status or Disposition: Supreme Court Denied Application to Vacate Stay (July 16, 2020); Eleventh Circuit Granted in Part Motion to Stay (July 29, 2020); Eleventh Circuit Reversed District Court’s Decision and Vacated Injunction (September 11, 2020)

Summary: Individual voters sued Florida Governor DeSantis and state elections officials to challenge Florida’s requirements that felons must pay all fees, fines, and other restitution ordered by a court in order to complete their sentences and restore their right to vote. Plaintiffs argued that the requirements violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the Twenty-Fourth Amendment, the Voting Rights Act, and the Florida Constitution. Following a bench trial in the District Court for the Northern District of Florida, the plaintiffs won declaratory and injunctive relief. On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit ruled for the defendants by staying the preliminary injunction in part. The plaintiffs’ application to vacate the Eleventh Circuit’s stay was denied by the Supreme Court. Finally, the Eleventh Circuit reversed the District Court and vacated the challenged portions of its injunction, determining that the Due Process Clause did not impose an obligation on Florida to provide felons with the information necessary to determine whether they had paid all court-ordered fees and completed their sentences.

Fraud and Vote Dilution

Ward v. Jackson, No. CV2020-015285 (Maricopa Cty. Sup. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: November 24, 2020

State: Arizona

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion to Expedite Consideration Denied (January 11, 2021); Distributed for Conference Scheduled February 19, 2021 (January 27, 2021)

Summary: Plaintiff Ward, Arizona’s Republican Party chair and a Republican presidential elector, filed suit against the state’s Democratic electors, seeking an order from the Maricopa County Superior Court that President-elect Biden’s win in Arizona was void, or, in the alternative, that a second recount must be conducted. The plaintiff alleged, among other things, that there were issues with verifying voters’ signatures on mail-in ballots, illegal votes, and that the ballot-tabulation machines had duplicated some votes in favor of Biden. The Superior Court denied the plaintiff’s request for relief and ordered confirmation of the election results in Arizona, finding that the evidence did not show that there was widespread voter fraud or enough issues with the vote-counting process to require overturning the election results. The plaintiffs appealed to the Arizona Supreme Court, which affirmed the Superior Court’s decision on December 8, 2020. Following that defeat, the plaintiffs filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court on December 11, 2020, along with a motion to expedite consideration of the petition. While the Court denied the motion to expedite on January 11, 2021, the case was distributed for conference on January 27. The conference is scheduled for February 19, 2021.

Arizona Republican Party v. Fontes, No. CV2020-014553 (Maricopa Cty. Sup. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: November 12, 2020

State: Arizona

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion to Dismiss Granted and Application for Preliminary Injunction Denied (November 19, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiff Arizona Republican Party filed suit against Maricopa County Recorder Fontes and the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors. The plaintiff sought mandamus relief to compel the defendants to perform the hand count sampling of ballots from precincts, rather than vote centers, as allegedly required under Arizona law, and an injunction to prevent the defendants from certifying the election results and issuing the official canvass. After hearing oral arguments, the Maricopa County Superior Court granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss, and denied the plaintiff’s application for preliminary injunction.

Constantino v. City of Detroit, Nos. 20-014780-AW (Wayne Cty. Cir. Ct.), 355443 (Mich. Ct. App.)

Complaint Filed: November 9, 2020

State: Michigan

Current Status or Final Disposition: Plaintiffs’ Petition for Injunctive Relief and Plaintiffs’ Motion for Protective Order Denied by Wayne County Circuit Court (November 13, 2020); Leave to Appeal Denied by Michigan Court of Appeals (November 16, 2020); Application for Leave to Appeal Filed with Michigan Supreme Court (November 17, 2020)

Summary: Individual voters and poll challengers sued the City of Detroit, the Detroit Election Commission, and other state elections officials, alleging voter fraud throughout Wayne County as a result of violations of Michigan law. The plaintiffs made various claims under both the Michigan Constitution and Michigan statutory law, including statutory election law violations and equal protection violations. The plaintiffs requested that the Wayne County Circuit Court require the defendants to conduct an independent, non-partisan audit of the election results in Detroit. The Wayne County Circuit Court denied the plaintiffs’ requests for relief, holding that “[i]t would be an unprecedented exercise of judicial activism for this Court to stop the certification process of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers,” and noting that the affidavits submitted largely did not even concern activity at the Detroit Election Headquarters. Plaintiffs filed a motion for immediate consideration, a motion for peremptory reversal, and for leave to appeal with the Michigan Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals granted the motion for consideration but summarily denied the remaining motions “for failure to persuade the Court of the existence of manifest error requiring reversal and warranting peremptory relief without argument or formal submission.” The plaintiffs then filed an application for leave to appeal and a motion for immediate consideration with the Michigan Supreme Court, which are currently pending.

Stoddard v. City Election Commission of Detroit, No. 20-014604-CZ (3rd Judicial Cir. Ct. Mich.)

Complaint Filed: November 4, 2020

State: Michigan

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion for Injunctive Relief Denied (November 6, 2020)

Summary: Individual voter Stoddard and the Election Integrity Fund filed suit against the City Election Commission of the City of Detroit, Chairperson of the City Election Commission Winfrey, and the Wayne County Board of Canvassers. The plaintiffs requested a preliminary injunction to: (1) require the defendants to retain all original and duplicate ballots and poll books; and (2) enjoin certification of the county election results until party inspectors could compare the duplicate ballots with the originals. The plaintiffs claimed that an injunction was necessary because party inspectors were not present at each table inside the absentee vote counting board location. The Third Judicial Circuit Court for Wayne County disagreed with the plaintiffs, finding that the plain language of the relevant state statute only required that each major party have a representative present at the site of the absentee vote counting. The court also noted that the plaintiffs had failed to identify concrete occurrences of the alleged violations of state election law. 

Law v. Whitmer, No. 20 OC 00163 1B (Carson City Dist. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: November 17, 2020

State: Nevada

Current Status or Final Disposition: Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Granted (December 4, 2020)

Summary: Contestants, Republican Party presidential elector candidates, filed a statement of contest against Democratic Party presidential elector candidates challenging the results of the November 2020 presidential election in Nevada. The contestants sought an order declaring either: (1) President Trump as the winner of Nevada and thereafter certifying the Republican elector candidates as Nevada’s presidential electors, or (2) that President-elect Biden’s victory is null and void, and that no candidate for elector for President be certified from Nevada. The Republican contestants alleged various election administration irregularities and voter fraud, from problems with the provisional ballot-casting process to mismatched signatures being accepted by the ballot machines. The Democratic defendants filed a motion to dismiss the statement of contest. The First Judicial District Court for Carson City, Nevada granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss, holding that the Republican contestants “failed to meet their burden to provide credible and relevant evidence to substantiate any of the grounds set forth [by state statute] to contest the November 3, 2020 General Election.”

Kraus v. Cegavske, No. 82018 (Nev. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: October 23, 2020

State: Nevada

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion for Stay and to Expedite Appeal Granted in Part and Denied in Part (November 3, 2020)

Summary: An individual voter, President Trump’s campaign committee, and the Nevada Republican Party sued Nevada Secretary of State Cegavske and state elections officials. The plaintiffs sought an injunction against the Registrar of Voters for Clark County to prevent the registrar from using artificial intelligence to authenticate ballots, which the plaintiffs claimed deprived them of the right to observe the ballot-counting process. The Nevada Supreme Court agreed to expedite the appeal given the time-sensitive nature of the election. But the Court ultimately agreed with the district court that the plaintiffs had failed to present sufficient evidence that enjoining the use of artificial intelligence to process ballots was necessary to ensure that the defendants complied with election laws. 

Election Integrity Project of Nevada v. Nevada, Nos. A-20-820510-C (Clark Cty. Dist. Ct.), 81847 (Nev. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: September 1, 2020

State: Nevada

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition for Writ of Mandamus Denied by Nevada Supreme Court (October 7, 2020); Application for Emergency Permanent Injunction Denied by Clark County District Court (November 20, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs the Election Integrity Project of Nevada and Republican Senate candidate Sharron Angle filed a complaint for preliminary and permanent injunctions and declaratory relief against the state of Nevada on relation of Nevada Secretary of State Cegavske. The plaintiffs asked the Clark County District Court to enjoin the Secretary from certifying Nevada’s election results due to alleged widespread voter fraud enabled by purported unconstitutionally enacted mail-in ballot legislation. The legislation had been enacted to permit statewide voting by mail and the mailing of ballots to all active, registered voters in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. The plaintiffs claimed that the mail-in ballot legislation violated Nevada law by containing unfunded mandates, and that it violated equal protection under the Nevada Constitution. The District Court denied the motion for a preliminary injunction on September 29, 2020, holding that the manner of allocating funds between local and state units of government was a non-justiciable political question and an exclusive function of the legislative branch. The plaintiffs then filed a petition for a writ of mandamus with the Nevada Supreme Court, which was denied on October 7, 2020. The Nevada Supreme Court held that the district court below had properly decided that the plaintiffs had not made the requisite prima facie showing that they were entitled to a preliminary injunction to prevent the Nevada Secretary of State from implementing the mail-in ballot legislation. Following the November 3, 2020 election, the plaintiffs applied for an emergency permanent injunction, which the district court denied.

Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. v. Boockvar, No. 20-3371 (U.S. 3d Cir. App.)

Complaint Filed: November 9, 2020

State: Pennsylvania

Current Status or Final Disposition: Denial of Injunction Pending Appeal and of Leave to Amend Affirmed (November 27, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs, Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. and two individual voters sued Secretary of the Commonwealth Boockvar and county boards of elections, alleging that Pennsylvania election officials had enabled voter fraud. Specifically, plaintiffs took issue with the state’s mail-in ballot procedures, and claimed that the regulations for observing and monitoring the counting of ballots in Pennsylvania had been invalidly enacted, presenting opportunities for widespread voter fraud, and thus denied voters due process under the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania dismissed the suit in its entirety, with prejudice, for lack of evidence supporting the allegations of voter fraud, and denied the plaintiffs leave to amend their complaint. The court concluded in its opinion accompanying the order granting defendants’ motions to dismiss by saying that it “has been presented with strained legal arguments without merit and speculative accusations, unpled in the operative complaint and unsupported by evidence.” The court went on to add: “At bottom, Plaintiffs have failed to meet their burden to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.” The president’s reelection campaign appealed to the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, arguing that the District Court had abused its discretion in not permitting the campaign to amend its complaint a second time. Additionally, the campaign had sought an injunction to undo Pennsylvania’s vote certification. The Third Circuit affirmed the District Court’s decision, denying the campaign the opportunity to amend its complaint another time and denying an injunction pending appeal, noting that “tossing out millions of mail-in ballots would be drastic and unprecedented, disenfranchising a huge swath of the electorate and upsetting all down-ballot races too.”

In re Hotze, No. 20-0671 (Tex. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: August 31, 2020

State: Texas

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition for Writ of Mandamus Denied (October 7, 2020)

Summary: The Republican Party of Texas and individual voters sued the Texas Secretary of State over the decision to extend early voting, permitting voters to drop off absentee ballots in person to the early voting clerk’s office, and sending out unsolicited vote-by-mail applications. The plaintiffs alleged that these practices violated the Texas Constitution and the Texas Election Code, would lead to voter fraud, and that the governor’s order suspending parts of the Election Code was constitutionally invalid because it violated the separation of powers. Plaintiffs sought to preclude the secretary from enforcing the suspension of these provisions of the Election Code by petitioning the Texas Supreme Court for a writ of mandamus. That court denied the petition without hearing oral argument or issuing an opinion.

Trump v. Wisconsin Elections Commission, No. 2:20-cv-01785 (E.D. Wis.)

Complaint Filed: December 2, 2020

State: Wisconsin

Current Status or Final Disposition: Plaintiff’s Complaint Dismissed with Prejudice and Motion for Preliminary Injunction Denied (December 12, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiff President Trump sued the Wisconsin Elections Commissions, its members, and other state elections officials over the administration of the November 3 presidential election. Specifically, the plaintiff alleged that the state elections officials had violated his rights under the Electors Clause of Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution by issuing guidance on state election law during the coronavirus pandemic that illegally deviated from state statutes. The plaintiff requested that the court order the Wisconsin governor to essentially discard the state election results and appoint presidential electors in an alternative manner. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that it failed to state a claim and that the court lacked jurisdiction. The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin determined that it jurisdiction to hear the claims, but dismissed the complaint on the merits, finding that the presidential electors were being properly appointed under the U.S. Constitution. Remarking on the unusual nature of the case, the court stated that a “sitting president who did not prevail in his bid for reelection has asked for federal court help in setting aside the popular vote based on disputed issues of election administration, issues he plainly could have raised before the vote occurred.”

Number of Polling Locations

Robinson v. Board of Elections, No. 1:20-cv-01364 (D.D.C.)

Complaint Filed: May 21, 2020

State: District of Columbia

Current Status or Final Disposition: Case Dismissed with Prejudice (June 30, 2020)

Summary: Individual voters filed suit against the D.C. Board of Elections alleging that the closure of the majority of polling places in Ward 8 violated the Voting Rights Act because the policy prevented members of a protected class from having equal opportunities to participate in elections. Ward 8 of D.C. is over 92% African-American. The District Court for D.C. denied the plaintiffs’ motion for a temporary restraining order in a telephonic hearing. The court dismissed after the parties settled the case.

Anderson v. Raffensperger, No. 1:20-cv-03263 (N.D. Ga.)

Complaint Filed: August 6, 2020

State: Georgia

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motions to Dismiss Granted, and Motion for Preliminary Injunction Denied (October 13, 2020)

Summary: Individual voters, the Democratic Party of Georgia, and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee sued Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger, members of the Georgia State Election Board, and members of various county boards of registration and elections over complaints that the closing of several polling locations, combined with inadequate election equipment and poll-worker training, led to extraordinarily long wait times for voters during the primary election. The plaintiffs alleged that these circumstances deterred Georgians from voting during the primary, and that the long lines, lack of trained poll workers, and technical issues placed an undue burden on their right to vote. Plaintiffs sought a preliminary injunction in advance of the November Election. The District Court for the Northern District of Georgia held that the plaintiffs lacked standing, as they could not show that individual voters would suffer future injuries in the November Election, and that even if the plaintiffs did have standing, the relief they sought was inappropriate and too vague.

Griffin v. Hawaii, No. 1:20-cv-00298 (D. Haw.)

Complaint Filed: July 2, 2020

State: Hawaii

Current Status or Final Disposition: Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss with Leave to Amend Granted (September 28, 2020); Amended Complaint Filed (October 13, 2020)

Summary: A political candidate sued Hawaii pro se over the state’s vote-by-mail program, arguing that it would, among other things, reduce the number of in-person polling sites available in the state, thereby increasing voter fraud and rendering in-person voting options inadequate. The court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss with leave to amend because the plaintiff had failed to provide a basis for federal jurisdiction and failed to state a claim. A hearing on the matter is currently scheduled for October 28, 2020.

Nemes v. Bensinger, No. 3:20-cv-00407 (W.D. Ky.)

Complaint Filed: June 8, 2020

State: Kentucky

Current Status or Final Disposition: Voluntarily Dismissed (July 17, 2020)

Summary: Republican state representatives and individual voters filed a class action against county elections officials and others, alleging that certain counties’ reductions of in-person voting options for the June 23, 2020 primary (including one county’s decision to have a singular polling site), violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments, and the Voting Rights Act. The plaintiffs claimed that these restrictions denied the right to vote on the basis of race. The District Court for the Western District of Kentucky denied the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction because it did not find that the reduction in polling sites violated the U.S. Constitution or the Voting Rights Act. The court held that the plaintiffs could not show that voters of the protected class (mostly African-American) would face a disproportionate burden in voting. The case was voluntarily dismissed when the Kentucky Secretary of State stated that he would not permit single polling sites in the state’s larger counties during the November Election.

Democracy North Carolina v. North Carolina State Board of Elections, No. 20-1728 (4th Cir.); No. 20-cv-457 (M.D.N.C.)

Complaint Filed: May 22, 2020; First Amended Complaint Filed June 5, 2020; Second Amended Complaint Filed June 18, 2020

State: North Carolina

Current Status or Final Disposition: Fourth Circuit Granted Motion to Voluntarily Dismiss (October 6, 2020); District Court Granted in Part and Denied in Part Intervenors’ Motion for Relief (October 14, 2020)

Summary: Democracy North Carolina, the League of Women Voters of North Carolina, and individual voters sued the State Board of Elections over state laws that impose restrictions on in-person early voting availability, mail-in absentee voting, and voter registration. The plaintiffs alleged that North Carolina’s 25-day registration waiting requirement burdens North Carolinians’ right to vote under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the First and Fourteenth Amendments, and the Americans with Disabilities Act. They also sought a waiver of the state’s requirement that absentee voters notarize or have their ballot signed by two witnesses, and to relax the 25-day deadline for requesting absentee ballots. In particular, the plaintiffs wanted increased health and safety measures at the polls, with additional polling locations in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. On October 6, the Fourth Circuit granted the motion to voluntarily dismiss the case.

Texas Organizing Project v. Callanen, No. 5:20-cv-01189 (W.D. Tex.)

Complaint Filed: October 6, 2020

State: Texas

Current Status or Final Disposition: Plaintiff’s Motion to Remand to State Court Granted (October 7, 2020)

Summary: The Texas Organizing Project and others sued the elections administrator of Bexar County and others, alleging that Bexar County’s decision to close election-day polling sites, failure to post required notices for polling sites online, and a decision to restrict the appointment process for volunteer deputy registrars violated the Texas Election Code. The defendants removed the case to the District Court for the Western District of Texas. The court then granted plaintiffs’ motion to remand to state court, finding that it lacked federal question jurisdiction and holding that even if it had jurisdiction, it should abstain because a case alleging violations of state voting laws is better decided in state court.

Redistricting

Miller v. Thurston, No. 20-2095 (8th Cir.)

Complaint Filed: April 22, 2020

State: Arkansas

Current Status or Final Disposition: Motion to Stay Denied and District Court’s Judgment Reversed July 23, 2020

Summary: Plaintiffs sought to place a constitutional amendment on the Arkansas ballot to amend the state constitution’s redistricting provisions. They alleged that the state’s ballot access requirements were unconstitutional as applied during the COVID-19 pandemic. Plaintiffs sought a preliminary injunction to require the Arkansas Secretary of State to accept petitions signed by 6% (instead of 10%) of the total votes cast in the prior gubernatorial election, to accept electronic signatures for ballot access, to extend the deadline for collecting signatures from July 3 to September 3, and to enjoin the enforcement of a requirement that signatures be gathered in the presence of a canvasser and a notary. The District Court for the Western District of Arkansas granted plaintiffs’ motion in part, enjoining the enforcement of the requirements that the petition be witnessed by a canvasser and sworn before a notary in-person. The Eighth Circuit reversed on the grounds that the District Court was wrong in applying strict scrutiny to the state’s in-person signature witness and notarization requirements.

Self Advocacy Solutions North Dakota v. Jaeger, No. 3:20-cv-00071 (D.N.D.)

Complaint Filed: May 1, 2020

State: North Dakota

Current Status or Final Disposition: Permanent Injunction Granted (August 28, 2020)

Summary: Self Advocacy Solutions North Dakota and other advocacy groups sued North Dakota Secretary of State Jaeger and the Grand Forks County auditor, challenging a state law that does not provide voters an opportunity to cure mismatched signatures on their ballots. The District Court for the District of North Dakota issued a preliminary injunction on June 3, finding that there was no potential for voter confusion as a result of enjoining the signature-matching process, which occurs after voters cast their ballots. As such, the court reasoned, the admonition that federal courts should refrain from changing election rules close to an election did not apply.

Voter Identification Requirements

Spirit Lake Tribe v. Jaeger, Nos. 1:16-cv-008, 1:18-cv-222 (D.N.D.)

Complaint Filed: October 30, 2018

State: North Dakota

Current Status or Final Disposition: Consent Decree Approved (April 27, 2020)

Summary: The Spirit Lake Nation and Standing Rock Sioux Tribe sued over the state’s voter identification law, which required that the identification card include the voter’s current residential street address to cast a ballot. The Native American groups claimed that this unduly burdened their right to vote, as many lacked street addresses by virtue of living on reservations in North Dakota. The opposing parties entered into a consent agreement, whereby the state permitted Native American voters who do not possess a residential address to locate their residence on a map when applying for an absentee ballot or when voting at the polls, have county officials provide their addresses, and thereby permit their ballots to be counted even if the address mismatches that on their identification cards.

Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. v. Boockvar, No. 602 M.D. 2020 (Penn. Commonwealth Ct.)

Complaint Filed: November 9, 2020

State: Pennsylvania

Current Status or Final Disposition: Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss Granted (November 21, 2020)

Summary: Plaintiffs Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. and two individual voters sued Secretary of the Commonwealth Boockvar and county boards of elections, alleging that Pennsylvania election officials had enabled voter fraud. Specifically, plaintiffs took issue with the state’s mail-in ballot procedures, and claimed that the regulations for observing and monitoring the counting of ballots in Pennsylvania had been invalidly enacted, presenting opportunities for widespread voter fraud, and thus denied voters due process under the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania dismissed the suit in its entirety, with prejudice, for lack of evidence supporting the allegations of voter fraud. The court concluded in its opinion accompanying the order granting defendants’ motions to dismiss that it “has been presented with strained legal arguments without merit and speculative accusations, unpled in the operative complaint and unsupported by evidence.” The court went on to add: “At bottom, Plaintiffs have failed to meet their burden to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.” President Trump’s legal team has indicated that they plan to appeal the decision to the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. 

Wisconsin Voters Alliance v. Wisconsin Elections Commission, No. 2020AP001930-OA (Wis. S. Ct.)

Complaint Filed: November 24, 2020

State: Wisconsin

Current Status or Final Disposition: Petition for Original Action Denied (December 4, 2020)

Summary: Petitioners, the Wisconsin Voters Alliance and several individual electors, filed an emergency petition for original action in the Supreme Court of Wisconsin against respondents, the Wisconsin Elections Commission and its individual members. The petition claimed that state and local election officials in cities that had received funds from Facebook CEO Zuckerberg’s Center for Technology and Civic Life organization, had used these funds “to illegally circumvent Wisconsin absentee voting laws,” primarily the law providing for an exception to the state’s photo identification requirement. As such, the petitioners sought to declare the election results in Wisconsin null. The Supreme Court of Wisconsin denied the petition for leave to commence an original action in a 4-3 vote, concluding that there were issues of material fact that rendered the case inappropriate for the court to exercise its original jurisdiction. In a concurring opinion, Justice Hagedorn stated that the “petition falls far short of the kind of compelling evidence and legal support we would undoubtedly need to countenance the court-ordered disenfranchisement of every Wisconsin voter.” 

The Andrew Goodman Foundation v. Bostelmann, No. 3:19-cv-00955 (W.D. Wis.)

Complaint Filed: November 19, 2019

State: Wisconsin

Current Status or Final Disposition: Stipulation of Dismissal (August 24, 2020)

Summary: The Andrew Goodman Foundation sued various state elections commissioners, challenging the constitutional validity of Wisconsin’s student voter identification restriction under the Twenty-Sixth Amendment. This voter identification law mandates that only certain types of student IDs will be accepted for voting purposes, and only if that individual is currently enrolled in that same school as a student. The plaintiff claimed that the student voter identification restrictions unduly burdened the right to vote on the basis of age. Ultimately, the parties stipulated to dismissal.

Luft v. Evers, No. 2:11-cv-1128 (7th Cir.)

Complaint Filed: December 13, 2011

State: Wisconsin

Current Status or Final Disposition: Seventh Circuit Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, Vacated and Remanded in Part the District Court’s Order (June 29, 2020); Cases Consolidated by District Court (August 20, 2020)

Summary: Individual voters filed a class suit against Wisconsin Governor Evers and members of the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board, challenging a state law enacted in 2011 limiting which forms of photo identification could be used to vote. Plaintiffs argued that this law violates the Fourteenth and Twenty-Fourth Amendments, and the Voting Rights Act by denying due process and equal protection to individuals who do not have the requisite photo IDs. On appeal, the Seventh Circuit affirmed the district court’s holding that Wisconsin’s student identification provision was invalid. The Seventh Circuit found that the requirement that student identification cards may only be used to vote if the student also shows proof of current enrollment, differentiating those forms of identification from others, lacked a rational basis for differentiating voters using student identification and voters using other forms.

Voter Intimidation

Davis v. Benson, No. 355265 (Mich. Ct. App.)

Complaint Filed: October 22, 2020

State: Michigan

Current Status or Final Disposition: Stipulation to Dismiss (December 11, 2020)

Summary: An individual, Michigan Open Carry, Michigan Gun Owners, and the Michigan Coalition for Responsible Gun Owners sued Michigan Secretary of State Benson and others, seeking a declaratory judgment and a preliminary injunction enjoining the enforcement of her directive banning the open and concealed carry of firearms at or near polling sites. The plaintiffs claimed that the directive conflicted with existing Michigan law and interfered with individuals’ Second Amendment rights. The Michigan Court of Claims granted the plaintiffs’ preliminary injunction in part by enjoining Benson’s directive to the extent it prohibited open and concealed carry in places not already prohibited by law. Defendant appealed, and the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed the lower court’s injunction, finding that while the defendant raised legitimate concerns about how open carry could lead to voter intimidation, the state already had laws in place for preventing such intimidation. The defendant immediately appealed to the Michigan Supreme Court. After the appeal was filed and following the November general election, the parties agreed to dismiss the case on December 11, 2020.

So this pickle chip “California template” will impact elections until we go back to paper hand counted

also going to post this image in my atrocity scale since it is a perfect example.

so of course the same swamp creatures won after tjhe ballots were counted helped by various machine malfunctions in red areas since republicans are known to vote on election day this is a device that will suppress their vote.

stories she mentions multiple red places.

4-5 hour lines and scanners dont work

scanners worked here,

https://emeralddb3.substack.com/p/its-obvious-now-americas-voting-system

On rumble, Mr. Jones breaks it down – “Patriots in arizona call for a new legitimate midterm election on december 6. Just like in Houston Texas and just like in key areas of Georgia and key areas of Pennsylvania and key areas of Michigan, and Nevada – on the day of the election, last Tuesday, MAGICALLY, the computers failed, or there wasn’t enough printer paper, or ink – at the republican facilities, none of the democrats. Like Kari Lake said, she went and voted at a democrat facility, no problems. Democrat jurisdiction, democrat precinct.

Tonight’s ballots from washoe county pushed democrat cisco aguilar into a lead over gop secretary of state candidate jim Marchant, which will hold. If Finchem loses az- down by 109k votes right now, every “America First” sec state candidate will have lost (tweet by David Weigei)

and guess what happened, ladies and gentlemen? The cameras, as you know, failed overnight in the one county that magically produced the ballots that they needed to be able to have them win in that critical race in that state, or multiple races in multiple states.

Isn’t that just darling? And of course, here’s a screenshot there in Maricopa county – look who was inside the ballot rooms – Katie Hobbs, time stamped too. So there she is at 10:07 at night inside the special center where when the machines failed in the republican precincts, they shipped them by truck to this special center which then of course found the votes needed so she (Hobbs) could win.

a search on rumble for midterm election fraud showed video of a news website during the first 30-40 minutes of the New York election. It showed that for the counties where the results were showing the republican candidate winnning, the exact same number of votes were shown for the two candidates. The results came from the decision desk hq api – one of the 7 “trusted ” election results data sources which gets the results directly from when they are counted.

This, as you know, is an impossibility, for there to be 8 counties with the republican Lee Zeldin getting 34,311 of the votes and Kathy Hechel getting 20,064

You’ll notice of course, that not only has the Clinton county numbers changed – both dropping below what was shown on election night nov. 9, but the overall votes are 2.9 million for one candidate and 2.6 million for the other. Yet on election night, the totals showed 4.7 million for Hochel and 1.8 million for Zeldin. I guess they are not even trying to make it believable anymore. Numbers no longer matter, except the ones that the news announces as true.

and i would point out that not only do many dems like pelosi schumer feinstein etc act like they will win guaranteed, they also act like they are never going to die. while most of that preboomer generation are gone ie, all gen x’s grandparents, and even some of our parents—these people are in their 80s and dont even act like death crosses their mind at all. and their wealth? surely more than they admit just ike obamma somehow bought ahouse in marthas vineyard for 500 million, whered he get that?

did you know jeffrey epstein was worth over 500 million when he died? i wonder who else has shares in those companies? I wish we could see theinterlocking subversion surely demonstrated by the finances of these demons. and no one will stop them at the doj. so it is pretty depressing.

heres a great read from california globe

57.7 % – That’s How Many Californians Officially Don’t Care

Oh, and Los Angeles is schizophrenic, by the way

By Thomas Buckley, November 9, 2022 10:55 am

There was no red wave Tuesday night, so the question of whether or not it would finally crest the Sierras became moot even before California’s polls closed.

In the statewide races, those candidates with a “D” next to their name – despite their gross incompetence, ethical ickiness, and/or obvious naked self-interest – all won rather easily.  

As of this writing, Gavin Newsom got 57.7% of the vote, a comfortable number, but also a fascinating one.  That’s because it is exactly the same percentage that, on average, the other, save one, state office candidates got.

Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, Attorney General, Treasurer, and Insurance Commissioner – their average vote was 57.7% of the electorate, with a high of 58.1% and a low of 57.2% bookending the races.

Lanhee Chen – despite being vastly more qualified than opponent Malia Cohen and actually being endorsed by major newspapers and having enough money to be competitive and running a strong campaign – cut that number by 4 points – Cohen got 53.7% – but only by 4 points.  In other words, running an essentially best-case-scenario campaign netted Chen only an extra 260,000 or so votes compared to other weaker and/or poorly funded and/or no hope Republicans.

Both Alex Padilla’s Senate victory – he got 59% – and Tony Thurmond’s unconscionable re-election with 62% involved somewhat different dynamics – the federal aspect for Padilla and the hysterically theoretical non-partisan nature of the Superintendent of Public Instruction office can account for the slightly different results.

What this means is that 57.7% of Californians are, for all practical purposes, incapable of getting beyond base party identification, aggressively not paying attention, and utterly uninterested in the reality of the state. 

While that is extremely encouraging for the one-party oligarchy that runs California, that does not bode well for the future of the state.  In other words, the Sacramento Blob can sleep safely tonight, while 42.3% of Californians are thinking about sleeping safely in another state as soon as they can.

Now, it may still be possible – kinda sorta-ish possible – that Republicans will see gains in the statehouse, but whether or not they will be enough to end the Democrat’s super-majority in the Assembly is not yet clear.

On a positive note, at this point it seems that multiple congressional seats are still in play for Republican gains.

And on a very weird note, there is Los Angeles.  Extremely troublingly – the county tossed out Sheriff Alex Villanueva, the one elected official who actually did something about the city’s homeless problem but the city still might elect developer Rick Caruso – who campaigned hard on the same issue – its mayor.

Caruso currently has about a 3 point lead over LA machine-made Karen Bass, though, as has been seen before, that may change. But while “Angelenos,” as the departing, but not to India, Eric Garcetti would say, may very well have chosen an independent, not beholden to the machine, and business-oriented mayor, it also appears they elected the certifiable, hard left, recommended by the Los Angeles chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America Kenneth Mejia.

The LA-Democratic Socialists of America had other successes Tuesday, with actual DSA member Hugo Soto-Martinez (a prime suspect in the leaking of the infamous Nury Martinez, et. al. racism tape) poised to win his city council race and its “recommended” (the DSA, for some obscure reason almost assuredly tied to the byzantine internal organizational structures of every leftist group ever, distinguishes between endorsements and recommendations) candidate Katy Young Yaroslavsky taking hers.

The other two council races saw contradictory results.  On the plus side, tough-on-homelessness Traci Parks put the final dagger in outgoing Councilman Mike Bonin’s political career by defeating his pro-current homelessness situation acolyte Erin Darling.

On the flip side, Tim McOsker – such a machine creature he could have been built to spec – will take a seat on the council.  Not only does McOsker ooze status quo – he’s so inside he’s practically politically agoraphobic – he is an actual real-life honest-to-God member of the homeless-industrial complex, serving on the board of Linc Housing, an organization that uses public money to build “supportive” housing for the homeless.

The sun will rise tomorrow – whether or not it has set on California forever is up in the air.

Note – the specific numbers referenced in this article may change but the main premise will not.

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Thomas Buckley

Thomas Buckley is the former Mayor of Lake Elsinore and a former newspaper reporter. He operates a small communications and planning con

‘We are well aware’: Several machines down, multiple issues reported at Harris County polling location

HOUSTON – Multiple issues have been reported at polling locations in Harris County this Election Day, according to Harris County Elections.

KPRC 2 has learned that the Metropolitan Multi-Service Center, located at 1475 W. Gray St., has been experiencing “serious computer problems” this morning and only two machines were working at 7 a.m., according to a manager at the location.

The manager told KPRC 2 there were no previous issues reported during early voting.

When KPRC 2 photog Cesar Martinez left the location, a total of 10 out of 50 ballot machines were reportedly working, Martinez said.

Harris County Elections has acknowledged that issues have been reported from multiple polling locations across the county.

A spokesperson for Harris County Elections sent the following statement to KPRC 2 in regard to the issues:

“We are well aware of the issues and we have had all hands on deck to answer the support lines for our election workers to get things resolved as quickly as possible.”

KPRC will be reporting any issues that we see here, so continue to check back for more updates as they become available.

Are you having any issues while trying to cast a ballot? Give us a call during our Election Day phone bank in collaboration with the League of Women Voters Houston and Telemundo Houston at (713) 778-8920 (English) or (713) 778-8930 (Spanish).

Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Election Day. If you registered to vote by Oct. 11 and meet all other requirements, you have a right to cast a ballot as long as you’re in line at a polling location by 7 p.m.

For more information on polling locations and wait times, go to

HOUSTON – Multiple issues have been reported at polling locations in Harris County this Election Day, according to Harris County Elections.

KPRC 2 has learned that the Metropolitan Multi-Service Center, located at 1475 W. Gray St., was experiencing “serious computer problems” Tuesday morning and only two machines were working at 7 a.m., according to a manager at the location.

The manager told KPRC 2 there were no previous issues reported during early voting.

When KPRC 2 photog Cesar Martinez left the location, a total of 10 out of 50 ballot machines were reportedly working, Martinez said.

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A spokesperson for Harris County Elections sent the following statement to KPRC 2 in regard to the issues:

“We are well aware of the issues, and we have had all hands on deck to answer the support lines for our election workers to get things resolved as quickly as possible.”

That afternoon, Harris County Elections Administrator Clifford Tatum addressed concerns and issues that occurred at various locations.

“Some of it has to do with the manner of which it was set up, some of it has to do with perhaps the printers not doing what it was supposed to do,” Tatum said. “But the good news is that voters are voting. I was just informed that we’ve had at least 120,000 today as of noon time and we’d like to remind our voters that the polls are open until 7 p.m.”

Tatum also reminded registered voters that there are 782 locations.

“If you get to one particular location and the line seems to be longer than you care to endure, you can go to Harrisvotes.com and look up the closest polling location, he said.

Tatum also explained that they were working to fix the issues with machines.

“There’s a location at Baker Ripley where the judge had a mishap with a supply box and the key to the machines which then delayed the opening of that location,” he said.

A technician and supplies were sent to the site to help the judge get set up. Tatum said it was then discovered that some of the clerks assigned to work at that location decided not to work that day, so they had to send additional resources and clerks to help out.

“The good news is that while voters are there waiting, there were other locations within the vicinity they could have driven themselves to,” Tatum said. “The long and the short of it is we have to control the things that we can. We need to control our supplies a little better, control our access a little better and those are things we will assess post-election to ensure we get it right the next time.”

Tatum said there were no reports of any voter intimidation or coercion and assured that everyone who wanted to cast a ballot would be able to.

Polls are open on Election Day from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. If you registered to vote by Oct. 11 and meet all other requirements, you have a right to cast a ballot as long as you’re in line at a polling location by 7 p.m.

For more information on polling locations and wait times, go to www.harrisvotes.com.

Tracking potential issues at voting centers, ballot drop-off locations

Polls are open until 7 p.m. across the state

https://assets.scrippsdigital.com/cms/video/player.html?video=https://content.uplynk.com/c252e5bef74349019e7901839c83b208.m3u8&purl=/news/political/elections/tracking-potential-issues-at-voting-centers-ballot-drop-off-locations&ads.iu=/6088/ssp.knxv/news/political/elections/tracking-potential-issues-at-voting-centers-ballot-drop-off-locations&ads.proxy=1&poster=https://x-default-stgec.uplynk.com/ausw/slices/c25/5c3d34b8b29a45469a86c02775b7a2cf/c252e5bef74349019e7901839c83b208/poster_b16e212620524611934ccce90622cc03.jpg&title=Maricopa%20County%20Recorder%20Stephen%20Richer%20gives%20first%20update%20on%20election%20day&kw=&autoplay=true&contplay=*recent&mute=0&tags=Homepage%20Showcase%2CLocal%20News%2CElections&section=Your%20Voice%2C%20Your%20Vote%20%7C%20ABC15%20Arizona&cust_params=temp%3D60-69%26weather%3Dclear&host=abc15.com&s=knxv

Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer gives a first update on Election Day.

tabulation machine

By:abc15.com staff

Posted at 6:40 AM, Nov 08, 2022

and last updated2:12 PM, Nov 08, 2022

PHOENIX — Polling centers are open until 7 p.m. across Arizona and ABC15 is tracking issues at voting centers and ballot drop-off locations.

In the morning and early afternoon, voters reported long lines and some machines that weren’t accepting ballots at various locations across the Valley.

Election officials held a news conference just before 9 a.m. addressing additional tabulation center issues. There are 223 polling locations in Maricopa County, they said about 20% of voting centers were having issues with tabulation machines.

As of 2 p.m., Maricopa County Elections officials say they’ve identified a solution to the problem, which impacted about 60 voting centers. County officials say the issue was a printer setting. “It appears some of the printers were not producing dark enough timing marks on the ballots,” officials stated in a release. “This solution has worked at 17 locations, and technicians deployed throughout the county are working to resolve this issue at the remaining locations.”

A press conference addressing the issue was held Tuesday afternoon. Watch in the player below:

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Seeing a potential issue at your polling center? Let us know by sending an email to share@abc15.com.

A procedure has also been put in place for issues like this where ballots can be inserted in Door #3. Those ballots will be counted later by a bipartisan team, election officials say.

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“Even when we did have this active issue, still, there was no one who came today with a valid I.D. who was turned away from the polls,” Bill Gates with the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors said. “Those people were given a ballot, they were given the opportunity to fill out the ballot, and then if the ballot was not going through this tabulator, they then had the option to put it down here in box number three, or also we’ve been giving people the option to check out, if they wanted to, if they were uncomfortable putting the ballot there in box three, and then they could go to one of the other 222 vote centers across Maricopa County.”

OTHER ISSUES REPORTED:

Shortly after opening at 6 a.m., the Burton Barr Library voting location in Phoenix reported it was acting as a ballot drop-off-only site due to tabulation center issues. Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer told ABC15 it was a “small issue” that was not impacting the ability of voters to cast their ballots. It was resolved at that center shortly after 7 a.m.

Maricopa County officials said, in that instance: “Poll workers put in the password incorrectly on the tabulators three times and they were locked out. This is a security feature designed to protect the vote. We’ve sent a tech to get the tabulators up and running. Voters can still check in and vote their ballot. But in the interim, voters have a few options. They can wait for the tech to bring out a new password and memory cards, they can insert their voted ballots into a secure door in the ballot box and bipartisan poll workers will insert their ballots into the tabulator at the end of the night, or they can choose to vote at another location.”

“None of this indicates any fraud,” Bill Gates with the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors said.

Facts from before the steal – and after – vaccine madness

Before covid was announced here, some snazzy people were already reporting it, which is interesting, and fits into the fact that these weird things are going on with the vaccine and the election and now with this turn into totalitarianism based on the vaccine.

This article which I link to at the end about mrna vaccines, reminded me of the state of things before the election. At that time, during the presidential debate, President Trump said that the vaccines could be ready mid November and all his health advisors and others were quoted by multiple papers as saying that was impossible, it would take way longer than that, not before next summer (i.e. summer 2021)

As an aside, it is inexpressible how much is different with President Trump not ion office, and inexpressibly sad that they “stole him from mankind”. This article by cold fury captures some of this angle, but I digress.

Yet right after the steal, in November, when Trump had said, they were suddenly ready to be granted emergency use authorization. So we can see that this was done so that the completion of the vaccines on an amazingly quick timetable would not be credited to President Trump, but would be credited to the “interlocutory resident”. As they have been.

But the speed with which the vaccines went from being a thankful, wow, how quick thing to Emergency use authorization to able to be mandated by employers and the military etc is astounding. How can they mandate what is experimental? This is not in the realm of anti vaxxer or conspiracy theory, this is simply saying the very text of the authorization granted by the FDA for these “vaccines” which everyone knows were developed very quickly and thus long term effects can be unknown (even if they were normal and not mRNA) says they can’t be mandated. Yet the FDA, the federal agency that we are supposed to trust about judging medicines healthiness for the public, is going along with all these other government agencies mandating what they said could NOT be mandated but required informed consent to experimental treatment. That is infuriating.

Also, there is the south border being flooded with whoever wants to come up here and be granted amnesty I”m sure soon enough, while the border with Canada remains closed except for one 6 hour visit allowed in one and a half years. The southern border flood is not being tested for covid, or vaccinated, or discussed as if they are unvaccinated, or at all, but they are released into the country, now sometimes without even court dates for a hearing, just released. Uh huh. Yet who are they discussing when they discuss the pandemic of the unvaccinated? the whitey patriots who don’t trust the government – the trump supporters, the ones they hate and want to destroy.

And how can they mandate it when the people being hospitalized are actually 75% vaccinated people? They call these “breakthrough” cases – and are saying they are some covid 19 “delta variant” but some are saying that it is no delta variant but is actually caused by the vaccines.

Lastly, let us look back at a slightly more honest article, written before the election, when the vaccines were allegedly a long way from being available, and certainly a long way from being mandatory. Before the EUA even. See how differently the mRNA aspect of it is discussed.

Now it is not even mentioned, they are simply called vaccines, to bank on the trust the public has for the word vaccine, based on the 12 previous properly tested ones like for measles and polio. Soooo demonic to do that. IT didn’t take long for them to stop mentioning the “emergency use” part of the authorization by the FDA, now they are duplicitously calling them “FDA authorized” which most people/sheeple mix together in their heads with FDA approved. My mother in law keeps telling my husband to take the Pfizer one based on that she has heard it is FDA approved. It is FDA AUTHORIZED for emergency use – with informed consent.

This whole thing is a travesty. And you should read the CDC’s site – they are in knots trying to explain to people that they get tested for covid 19 using an antibody test which deems them positive if they have antibodies for covid 19 in their system (never mind that they are recommending 40 cycles of the PCR test, which is well over the normally used 25 cycles and thus was done during Trump’s presidency to make the rate of positives be high) Nonetheless, they say if you have antibodies that means you are positive for it, because you are having an immune response to it. Your body is making the antibodies because the virus is present.

Then they flip around again and say “but that does not mean you are immune to it, it is not proven whether people who have the antibodies to covid 19 have immunity to covid-19” So you only count as a positive case, but do not get to be considered immune. Unlike usual cases of other viruses where part of the herd immunity calculation is that people who have had the virus develop the antibodies to it and are thus immune to it. But they explain this away by saying that it’s not proven if the antibodies will protect you against being reinfected by the virus. And then they add “or a variant”

True, an antibody to a virus will not necessarily work if that virus mutates beyond the point where it is recognizable to the memory b and memory t cells and the antigen/antibodies in the immune system.

Thgus they say that even those who have had it (and thus have the antibodies enough to test positive for it) should still get the “vaccine.” I use quotes because what is being offered as a vaccine here is not a normal vaccine, like they have in Russia against covid, where a dead form of the virus is injected so a person’s immune system develops antigens/antibodies and memory b and t cells to it, and then can fight the live one if it comes in.

The nromal vaccines like the measles, polio original 12 we had here forever which were properly tested and approved, also made you actually immune, because they used the bodies normal immune response to an actujal whole virus, just dead. What the body’s own immune system does in response to an actual dead virus has components to it that somehow mean you really do get lifelong immunity to the virus from getting one vaccination (I think you have to have a polio booster once in your life)

When it is a normal vaccine like that, it doesn’t take gymnastics to explain who would benefit from vaccination and who would not. People who have had it have already had their body’s natural immune response triggered by the virus and have now got the antibodies/antigens memory b and t cells to that virus for life. Getting sick with the virus likely sucked for many of the people, because while their body was going through the immune response, they got sick. All the body responses to a live virus like fever, swollen glands, fatigue, nausea coughing sneezing aching that go along with the fight with a live virus. But at the end of it (and covid 19 has the same survivabliilyt rate as the flu which is why this is abstoluely so insane!) they come out with the antibodies/antigens and memory b and t cells which means they are thereafter immune. Not only that but for some reason you can’t susally transmit it to tothers wonce you ahave contracted it. Another bonus of the natural immune response.

How can they pretend that this one is different, now the antigens you have (which made us count you as positive) are not going to last and it might vary.

And at the same time as they deny that anyone could possibly have acquired any sort of lasting immunity by having it even though that is what happens with any other virus and is even being shown in israeli studies to be true of people with covid immunity from having had it, they are forcing people into a “vaccine” which does not do what normal vaccines do. It does not provide immunity to covid 19 (75% hospitalized are vaccinated, if you read the studies and reports fine prints and not the lying msm which are just lying through their teeth saying it is the unvaccinated getting the disease) and it is even weirder because the vaccinated actually are still spreading it and are shedding it.

But it is the unvaccinated who must go to concentration camps (unless they are illegal aliens, who are above reproach)

So it doesn’t do any of the good things normal vaccines or normal immunity does, but also, is an mrna and does weird and possibly bad no other vaccines do. So it is not even a vaccine and should not be called such. Here is the article about it, and isn’t it lucky they wanted to get volunteers so they could experiment with mRNA more, and they could get the investor s for it if they could just get the volunteers but how to get it on the scale they needed? voila! This is documented in judicial watch gotten foia emails between fauci and some other baddy. But I must go because my hands are tired.

Reminder – the left needed an excuse to do what they wanted to Trump supporters long before Jan 6 became their explanation of why

screen grab from rumble.com video of November 20, 2020 infowars broadcast

The Jan 6 2021 “insurrection” capitol breach, allegedly done by Trump supporters, is now the focus of a Congressional inquiry which can be guaranteed to last years like the Trump Russia collusion hoax did. The actual death of the day, a veteran woman named Ashli Babbit, is being hidden, while people who simply were in the capitol building that day (not necessarily violent) have been in some cases held in solitary confinement since they were taken into custody on the 6th. The thing smacks of a false flag frame up, because once the cui bono? question is asked (to whom is it a benefit?) we see that like other false flags, it fit perfectly into what the democrats and globalists needed at that moment and going forward, while it brought harm to all who allegedly performed it.

Knowing humans, they are not likely to do something directly against their own interest – and where Trump supporters have been known in security circles as non violent, and pride themselves on being law abidiing and peaceful, it is even more likely that the attack was not done by them.

There are also the usual “oddly timed call to the capitol police about devices that might be explosive, known of days before, but called about on the day”,. there is Nancy pelosi not allowing the national guard to be present, there are the videos of the police pushing open the barricades and waving people in, there is the fact that the doors to the capitol lock magnetically and have no outside handles and thus cannot be forced open from the outside, but only electronically opened by someone inside, there are the videos of the instigators inside the capitol at the beginning of the attack planning in a room and running out to various places, there is the use of tactics which are more organized than a spontaneous riot done by some there, such as having ear pieces megaphones, knowing to turn the barricades sideways to make them ladders, people wearing the color orange like a team color which millennial Millie pointed out, Patrick Bergie saying it looked like an iia and saying when he was in dc during the day of the “insurrection” he kept seeing people he had worked with who were in iia ops, also, everyone’s phones were scrambled within DC as soon as they got there, and the speakers at the place President Trump gave his speech were totally messed up and no one could hear, and they were too far when his speech ended to have walked up the crowded streets in time to be the ones doing the breach, there is the fact that then the evidence could not be heard by congress (and that was the first and last day it could have been shared) there is the fact that there were no portapotties provided (the dc people wanted to make the dc visit unpleasant for trump supporters who they knew were coming as President trump had invited them to come and lawfully protest the seating of the electors for Joe
Biden after all the election “irregularities” and when the doors opened, many trump supporters were behind others and did not know they were not allowed to go in, but thought the doors were properly opened and some had to pee since no portapotties, so they went in. and then last of all, there is the fact that it was done on the last legal day to stop the election, at the sitting of the electors, if they wanted to do an illegal insurrection to stop Biden like they are making it out to be, why would they pick a legal day? I’ve said it before, you don’t have to do a coup on a certain day, it’s illegal whenever you do it.

So while the retarded inquiry drags on, and more and more evilness comes out against Trump supporters (and apparently now vaccine refusers are fair game for hatred and jail and killing) and people who question the election, it’s important to remember that the 6th is what they are saying now is why they hate Trump supporters but they wanted to them jailed or dead long before the 6th was even a twinkle in the left’s eye.

As a note, to those doing the investigation, Owen Shroyer in that same infowars broadcast, https://rumble.com/vbaj2n-new-york-times-admits-massive-joe-biden-voter-fraud.html sums up the psychological profile of those on the left and those who support Trump quite succinctly.

“Why don’t Trump supporters loot and burn and assault and flip cars and engage in rioting and violence?
Cause we don’t do it! It’s not in our make up. We’re not criminal scum!”

Owen asks: Why, don’t Trump supporters, when they organize by the millions in DC, or by the hundreds of thousands in Richmond, Virginia, or thousands in Austin, Texas, or Atlanta, or any other state capitol, why don’t Trump supporters loot and burn and assault and flip cars and engage in rioting and violence? Cause we don’t do it! It’s not in our make up. We’re not criminal scum.

But what happens when the democrats organize, like black lives matter, what happens when the democrats organize, like antifa, they assault, they get violent, they riot they burn they loot they steal they assault people.

So, you can save your millions of dollars on the investigation, and there’s the answer. You’re Welcome.

Amistad Project’s eval of CTCL’s impact: comparison of relevant cities

The Amistad project commissioned a study of the impact of private money on the election – which carefully documented the way that Zuckerberg’s (and his wife, last name Chan, who is Chinese ancestry, which would be handy if you were China and needed spies, interestingly, so is Mitch McConnel’s) CTCL grants of 500 million were spent to influence the election.

Of course, before the election, this sort of thing would have been denied, because of course until it was done, it did not appear to be a coordinated plan, and without the extreme behavior on election night at the larger counting centers – which the CTCL grant had pushed its grantees towards – it still might not seem believable. But Amistad’s digestion and delineation was so good that the left had to take the tack of celebrating the hidden network, through the disgusting Time article I wrote of earlier, for one, and by this NPR piece for two.

As an aside, seeing what used to be neutral media bend the knee so hard on the communist/elites line since Trump won, and with BLM/diversity, and COVID has been revolting. It is so disappointing to see, given that when Bush was in power, and even Obama to some extent, they were doing some reasonable balanced reporting. For instance, they would have Wayne La Pierre on the show to debate someone on gun control, they on their own investigated some of the surveillance being used on Americans, they explored and decried the police state. Now, it is simply an arm of the democrat (read elite/globalist/anointed/marxist) party. And Tom Fitton even revealed that through an info request, he got emails showing direct coordination of various state governments with facebook, google twitter, to censor posts related to the election. Among other terrible things big tech did, as they moved to an exclusive partner for the left under Obama. I heard google visited the white house 450 times in a year. Now under interlocutory resident Biden, they have decided the public gets to know the visitor log when the white house feels like it. Which of course means there must be the most awful procession of demon globalist annointeds going in and out every day. The ones who are really in control. (Where are the inside the White House leakers now?)

This of course, implicates the Constitution because the companies have been shielded both by section 230, though of course, the protections there were based on those companies only offering platforms to everyone and having no editorial control over what was seen – but now they completely do this and the protections still apply. The other protection that the courts came up with then for big tech was that they are private companies and free speech is only protected from government interference, not private companies interference. Yet, if the government pressures private companies to do what the government itself is forbidden by the constitution to do, that is as if the government is doing the thing. So it will be interesting to see if anyone bothers to file a lawsuit against that, but again, these are conservatives being censored, so suddenly the organizations that filed on behalf of people who wanted to hand out leaflets on private property such as housing developments and malls, where the court was convinced that even though it was private property, free speech rights applied and the private owner of the property could not block the person’s speech. Now that the same is happening to conservatives online, which is basically the main “public square” even with the evidence of direct government collusion, nothing happens. Yuck.

So the paper is great, and maybe because of it, or because they noticed in on their own, there have been several lawsuits related to the behavior of the countries election commissions and secretaries of state/whoever it was at the city or county level in charge of the election who applied for these grants thought hey were against the law because they violated hava provisions, AND because they had claw-back provisions and paid directly for election related jobs which are always supposed to be neutral. It is unheard of for private money to be involved in paying election judges or poll workers – I think a very stupid child could see why, yet they had the audacity to pull this off, in such a way that there was almost nothing anyone could do about it until it was too late. It also details the hundreds? of lawsuits filed by left leaning organizations before the election to move the ballots to mail and then to remove the safeguards states had in place to protect the mail ballot votes. So it details those well, also.

Anyway, a chart inside the report goes over where the grants were and the percentage Hillary won in 2016 and Trump in 2016 and I thought it would be cool to go and add in the actual vote outcome for trump and Biden in those places. This is because ctcl gave grants to places where Hillary won to places where trump won in a ratio of 9:1 which is putting its thumb on the scale. And someone who used to work for obama had said in a book that 2020 would be a block by block knock down battle of turnout, and loqw and behold, that’s what they did.

The 2020 election was a scandal – and it had traitors within a coordinated conspiracy and foreign actors, taking advantage of those insiders (China and others but China the most) using the internet to directly take votes from president Trump and give them to Biden. Mike Lindell of My Pillow made a second movie, this time about some packet logs that people recorded on election night which forensic analysts who have worked for us cyber command say are the proof and unchangeable of these intrusions and we are lucky someone thought to record the packets that night and bring them to Mike Lindell.

Sounds valid, and probably is, especially when you google search and get only articles trashing the film even though it is packet evidence verified by lots of cyber security people he paid for himself to review before publicizing it so he could be sure.

The baddies who stole the election and are now taking advantage of the interlocutory residents’ falsely attained presence in the White House are evil demons. I hope God punishes these people for this.

After all, just as the epic rap battle tesla vs edison song says of Tesla, the same could be said of President Trump

“You did not steal from me, you stole me from mankind”. Tesla and Trump.

“Interlocutory Resident” Pickle: “I’m going to get in trouble from my staff”.

Here’s a selection of articles after the G7 conference at which Joe Biden demonstrated to the world that he is a Pickle puppet with diminished cognitive capabilities and that
America is in fact being run by some unelected group of people or person on Biden’s staff. We don’t know who, becasuse now that Pickle was selected, there are no more leaks. That was just for the President that we the people picked.

Joe Biden made it obivous by ending his embarassing bunch of gaffes and verbal strangeness at G7 by saying that he was going to get in trouble from his staff if he answered the reporters question.

The press, who are supposed to exist to help the American people get the truth by being investigative journalists, of course, have asked no questions so far about any of this. Not during Biden’s “campaign” from his basement (due to covid-19 oh how sad, I”m sure otherwise has rallies would have been huge) not during the “selection” heist, and not during the first 6 months of his rule.

Instead, the press considered the disqueiting statement he made to be a joke, “imprudent” or at least tried to pass it off that way. I’m surprised they mentioned it at all, but saying it was a joke, amid other “light heartened” moments at the G7 where other world leaders”enjoyed warmly” Joe’s humor is a complete misrepresentation.

At least the indepedent pressed called it like it was: with articles like this this and this.

Putin, when discussing his meeting with Joe Biden at the G7, looked not uncomfortable, not hesitant exactly, but as you would if asked to comment on a senile old person and their actions at an event they were incapable of managing. President Putin carefully chose his words. The below transcription is from C-Span, at the mark 36:58 to about 37:47. The clipping tool on C Span would not let me end the clip after 37:07, where Putin says the most interesting part.

1
. IF HE ASKED ME WHAT KIND OF A PERSON AND INTERLOCUTORY RESIDENT BIDEN IS, I CAN SAY HE IS A CONSTRUCTIVE PERSON, WELL-BALANCED AND EXPERIENCED, SEASONED POLITICIAN. I EXPECTED THAT. HE RECALLS HIS FAMILY. ANY CONVERSATIONS HE HAS WITH HIS MOTHER. WHILE THESE THINGS DON’T DIRECTLY HAVE SOMETHING TO DO WITH OUR BUSINESS, IT SHOWS HIS MORAL VALUES IS ALL APPEALING AND I BELIEVE WE SPOKE THE SA
ME LANGUAGE”

In my trasncription below, I’ve added ellipses to show how the words were spaced out as Putin carefully chose his words.

Putin: If you ask me what kind of a person, an interlocutory resident, Biden is – a constructive person, well balanced and experienced politician and I expected that. He… recalled his family and…conversations he had with his mother. .. These things… don’t have something to do….directly with our business –but nevertheless…. it shows his qualities….and his… moral values….Is appealing

The “interlocutory resident”!

Russian reporter: Mr. President, following this meeting, did you have any illusions, any new illusions?

Putin: (chuckling): Well, I didn’t have any old illusions, let alone new ones, there have been no illusions whatsoever.

a great quote describing Pickle from frontpagemag author Bruce Thornton in an article titled Blueprint for Tyranny :

Finally, Polybius’ link of tyrannic ambition to mediocre politicians who “hanker after office, and find that they cannot achieve it through their own efforts or on their merits,” describes Biden to a T. Biden is a long-time senator with few legislative achievements he still will own, a vicious pit-bull on the Senate Judiciary Committee where he shamelessly demagogued Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas, a plagiarizer and unseemly harasser of women, a two-time loser in his bid for the presidency, a fabulist and grifter who monetized the office of Vice President to enrich his family, and a lightweight so light that his own boss, Barack Obama, said, “Don’t underestimate Joe’s ability to fuck things up.” Only a pandemic, disruptive lock-downs, and the Democrat primary threat of socialist Bernie Sanders––along with a probably fraudulent election, and a groveling media running interference–– could get such a meritless mediocrity into the Oval Office.

not mine, from The Epoch Times about Supreme Court throwing out election cases

The Supreme Court in Washington, on Nov. 4, 2020. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite) Judiciary

Supreme Court Dismisses Slew of 2020 Presidential Election Lawsuits

By Matthew Vadum February 22, 2021 Updated: February 22, 2021 biggersmallerPrint

The Supreme Court threw out a series of legal challenges on Feb. 22 to voting processes and results in several states left over from the recent presidential election cycle.

The high court didn’t explain why it refused to hear the cases, but three justices dissented from the decision not to hear one of the cases from Pennsylvania.https://subs.youmaker.com/template/show?tid=b5aee884-f497-4168-bedc-defd2012f158&sid=www.theepochtimes.com&v=1&ck=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&pl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theepochtimes.com%2Fsupreme-court-dismisses-slew-of-2020-presidential-election-lawsuits_3706263.html&tn=middle-article-widget&dna=%7B%22r%22%3A%22https%3A%2F%2Fnewamericangovernment.org%2F%22%2C%22u_s%22%3A%22%22%2C%22u_c%22%3A%22%22%2C%22pid%22%3A%22anonb2c7-f7f6-4eb8-82d8-3dfa4fd01b26%22%2C%22uid%22%3A%22user_0771b453db990c5b96c1e6622ac621b0cc866e6c%22%2C%22x%22%3A%22311-261-515%22%2C%22vt%22%3A0%2C%22g1%22%3A%22us%22%7D

On Jan. 11, with Inauguration Day just over a week away, the high court denied requests from the litigants–President Donald Trump, Republicans, and Trump supporters—to expedite several of the lawsuits, which concerned the presidential elections held in the battleground states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. The court, as is its custom, didn’t explain why it dismissed the emergency applications seeking to fast-track the lawsuits.

President Joe Biden, a Democrat, was inaugurated on Jan. 20, alongside Vice President Kamala Harris after Congress voted Jan. 7 to reject objections by senators and representatives challenging Electoral College votes from disputed states won narrowly by Biden. That vote took place after a breach of the U.S. Capitol by hundreds of protesters delayed the certification process for hours.

Some of the lawsuits challenged the election results on the basis of allegedly unconstitutional changes made to state election procedures. Article II of the U.S. Constitution states that “Each State shall appoint [electors for president and vice president] in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct.” Litigants point out that the legislative power here is “plenary,” meaning unqualified and absolute.

State officials, they say, aren’t allowed to modify election procedures without the consent of the legislature.

One of the now-dismissed appeals, Republican Party of Pennsylvania v. Degraffenreid, court files 20-542 and 20-574, was originally known as Republican Party of Pennsylvania v. Boockvar, but then respondent Kathy Boockvar resigned as Pennsylvania’s secretary of state and was replaced by Veronica Degraffenreid. The case dealt with the perceived overreach of the state’s Supreme Court when it unilaterally changed election rules without the consent of the state legislature.

The GOP argued in its petition that “important questions of federal law [were] implicated by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s 4–3 decision extending the General Assembly’s Election Day received-by deadline and mandating a presumption of timeliness for non-postmarked ballots.”

This is the case in which Justice Samuel Alito ordered on Nov. 6, three days after Election Day, that “all ballots received by mail after 8:00 p.m. on November 3 be segregated,” away from other voted ballots.

Justices Alito, Clarence Thomas, and Neil Gorsuch dissented from the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the appeal.

On Feb. 22, Alito wrote in his dissent, joined by Gorsuch, that the case presents “an important and recurring constitutional question: whether the Elections or Electors Clauses of the United States Constitution … are violated when a state court holds that a state constitutional provision overrides a state statute governing the manner in which a federal election is to be conducted. That question has divided the lower courts, and our review at this time would be greatly beneficial.”

In his dissent, Thomas expressed frustration, writing that the court “failed to settle this dispute before the election, and thus provide clear rules. Now we again fail to provide clear rules for future elections.”

Another now-dismissed appeal, Kelly v. Pennsylvania, court file 20-810, was brought by Rep. Mike Kelly (R-Pa.), a strong Trump supporter who challenged Biden’s victory in the Keystone State. Kelly had asked the Supreme Court to consider his lawsuit which challenged mail-in voting policies in his home state of Pennsylvania. Kelly argued that Act 77, the 2019 state statute that authorized universal, no-excuses mail-in voting, violated the Constitution.

Although support for challenging Electoral College results evaporated in Congress after the breach of the Capitol, Kelly held firm, objecting to the certification of the Pennsylvania electors early on Jan. 7. The challenge failed.

The Supreme Court denied another petition from Pennsylvania, Donald J. Trump for President v. Degraffenreid, court file 20-845. Boockvar was originally listed as the respondent.

Trump campaign attorney John C. Eastman of Anaheim, California, told The Epoch Times in mid-January that he still held out hope the nation’s highest court would take up the case because it concerned important issues.

“There is a well-recognized exception to mootness called ‘capable of repetition yet evading review,’ he said at the time.

“It is invoked quite frequently in election litigation, as oftentimes the issues are as applicable to the next election as to the current one. Our legal issue—whether non-legislative election and judicial officials in the state have the ability to ignore or alter state election law in the ‘manner’ of choosing presidential electors violates Article II of the U.S. Constitution, remains important and in need of the Court’s review.”

Another dismissed case was Wood v. Raffensperger, court file 20-799, brought by Trump supporter and lawyer L. Lin Wood against Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. Wood argued that Raffensperger, a Republican, “usurped” the plenary authority of the Georgia Legislature “by entering into a Settlement Agreement with the Democratic Party earlier this year and issuing an Official Election Bulletin that modified the Legislature’s clear procedures for verifying the identity of mail-in voters.”

The March 2020 settlement with the Democratic Party of Georgia, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee violated voters’ rights by setting forth “totally different standards to be followed [by] a poll worker processing absentee ballots in Georgia.”

A case from Arizona, Ward v. Jackson, court file 20-809, also was dismissed.

That lawsuit, brought by Arizona GOP chief Kelli Ward, claimed that the lower courts hadn’t allowed sufficient time to those challenging the state’s election results.

“In this case, the lower courts allowed only two full days of inspection and discovery into the validity of the presidential election in Arizona, in which … [3,333,829] ballots were cast.”

A case from Michigan, King v. Whitmer, court file 20-815, was dismissed.

The petition stated that there were “widespread voter irregularities and fraud in the State of Michigan in the processing and tabulating of votes and absentee ballots,” and that the trial court “completely and utterly ignored the dozens of affidavits, testimonials, expert opinions, diagrams and photos that supported the petitioners’ claim.”

Poll watchers, poll workers, central tabulators: industry specific words and linked NGOs leave elections unaccountable.

Trying to understand the mechanism of the fraud in the 2020 election requires a knowledge of several areas which are purposefully kept out of the language generally used with the public in discussing elections. In spite of being a reasonably intelligent and informed person, I am unable to name definitively just who it is that runs elections. This seems to be purposeful, and even if not, there are multiple levels of interlinked actors in the globalist cabal who do understand the system and terminology and have inserted themselves into it in a hidden way so as to attain the goals they want by misusing the elections.

For one, there are 501c3s linked with 501c4s who say they are non partisan but appear to simply be a way for rich donors to donate to organizations which manipulate the elections in their desired way without having to be transparent about who their donors are or how much they gave.

These nonprofits seem to be the main way that all these coordinated insertions were achieved in 2020, always the nonprofit, with a neutral sounding name (often involving the globalists enslavers favorite word “democracy”), or one that makes it sound like a government organization so that no eyebrows are raised when said organization fills out a memo of understanding directly with a government or election official.

In an article like that would have been an investigative piece in years past, similar to the “top secret government: growing beyond control” which was an expose, the Time magazine brags about the subterfuge and secrecy. The organizations obviously invited the Time reporter in, in order to brag, and the author is delighted to share. Depicting the cabal involved in 2020, Time magazine calls it the ones who “saved” the 2020 election : if by saved they mean saved it from reflecting the true will of the people. The Time article documents the depth and breadth of the interlinked conspiratorial cabal – if you can make it past the nauseatingly self congratulatory double speak in which it is written.That a shadowy cabal made the cover of Time magazine shows they no longer fear discovery or exposure and instead embrace the visibility because they control the narrative, and exposure on their terms (“write an article about our amazing shadow network that saved the election”) helps solidify the narrative in their words. they twist the intent of laws, elections, non profits so each in their hands becomes a sickening absolute inverse of its intended self.

how big a part do these non profits play? The question is, who is approving all these non profits? As far as I can tell, non profits have not been reviewed by a senate committee since McCarthy’s days – and there are reports from back then not just by him but by many states and through several years, showing that one of the main communist fronts in america was these non profits.

Now we have a situation where there are new non profits every time a cabal member wants to stop the truth from coming out and wants to keep things going in the direction the left wants. There’s suiciding people, blackmailing people, and offering to buy them off, aswell as simply refusing to follow lawful subpoenas, refusing to allow audits, and wiping data from things too. Oh, and getting the FBI to show up and tell them to restart shredding the ballots which were supposed to be reviewed and I though had to be kept for 2 years after each election.

With the 2020 election, cabal coordinated effort and power is seen in the following

  1. the covid thing turning so huge – what a demonstration of their power over the world, within days the entire world bent the knee to the what appears to be a crazy overblown turning upside down of known health concepts to instill fear and allow for government’s to be forced into taking out new trillions of loans from the international banksters as well as setting up America for a mail ballot election which would then permit the steal.
  2. the ctlc working with government by disguising their money with strings attached and given mostly to democrat areas 9:1 ratio due to “coronavirus” even though there was already enough money for all they covered due to the government going into 6 trillion more debt from shutting down.
  3. Lawsuits being filed before the election hundreds of them – by the left to take away protections ensuring absentee ballots were valid – after saying covid meant we had to vote absentee, then making sure any old ballot would count. Without these lawsuits, the steal could not have happened.
  4. scaring oldster poll workers away with covid fears and then bill gates hiring blacks to work the polls since they are easy to manipulate and mad at whites anyway.
  5. the interlinking of antifa with Joe Biden – remember, if you typed antifa into the URL, it took you to Joe Biden’s home page. If you went to blm’s website, the donate button took you to actblue which gives money to the dnc.
  6. and then all the rest in the time article.

So there are some of the non transparent non profits actions to effect the steal, the other aspect is that

  1. the election officials want to look good and since everyone votes on voting machines not paper, or at least uses electronic tabulators, they all use technology and are perfect sitting ducks to just be blinded by the voting machine companies.
  2. the voting machine companies and the ones that accredit the machines appear to be a self serving intelinked group again, which change ownershi8pl, one gets in trouble and shuts down, the enxt opesn underr a new name, and game on again. There is only about 3 players in the whole system – people act like it is no problem that there is proprietary and non secure tech in the handsd of private partisan businesses who selll their services and machines to officials who are not tech savvy and who thus do not demand anything of the voting machine companies except that they make the officials look good.
  3. there is apparently no oig for elections, there is the eac and one other commission and guess what the vote machine compnay has members on these commissions, so it is not efrf3ective as a oig type thing would be. How can there be no oversight of these super important things?

It’s like they expect the commission to inspect their selves and report honestly on their own actions and if there are problems. As if that would every happen. The reason there is an oig for all the other agencies (except the DOJ and Alphabet intelligence agencies, and that’s a problem too) is that all agencies would cover their own asses and say everything was perfect if there was no oig inspecting them. Thus, the election commissions, secretaries of states etc. always say “NO, there was no fraud, no problems etc” and the news reports it like “SEE – Trump was WRONG, the election officials say there was no fraud!” Ya think?

But back to the original beginning of this article, which was about how the lingo of the elections, the actual nuts and bolts is given out in dribs and drabs, and especially after the election or before. The media will report things in a circumspect manner but use the correct detailed terms – outside of the key election weeks.

This petition for certiorari to the supreme court was written partially by a lawyer from Anaheim who worked for the trump campaign. One clue of who is involved in election sis the hundreds of respondents he had to list to file suit against regarding the Pennsylvania elections. It is also a nearly perfect petition, yet it like all the others was not heard, even after the election. Thus the supreme court massively failed by failing to lay down the law, even after letting Biden be seated, also setting it up so this can happen in all elections going forward.

I am making this article to collect all these dribs and drabs together so that maybe over time all of it can be in one place, and then I can write a book.

In the meantime, here are some links to those articles with important words and concepts about election that are important to know. (and that are known and taken advantage of by the lefties inserting themselves into the election system to manipulate and steal our country)

  1. http://www.renewamerica.com/columns/huggett/101101
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20210126112844/http://www.renewamerica.com/columns/huggett/101101
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20210215114153/https://www.theepochtimes.com/poll-watchers-allege-election-manipulation-in-detroit-vote-count_3573758.html
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20210311050930/https://welovetrump.com/2020/11/13/shocking-statement-michigan-election-watcher-shane-trejo-observes-dozens-of-absentee-ballots-delivered-in-the-dead-of-night-to-detroits-tcf-center/
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20210306093653/https://nationalfile.com/video-massive-democrat-voter-fraud-busted-by-former-houston-city-councilman/
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20210217223819/https://www.bizpacreview.com/2020/12/03/dem-rep-goes-on-vile-rant-calling-hearing-witnesses-liars-but-this-legal-immigrant-is-not-having-it-1001781/
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20170629192247/https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckraker/county-clerk-s-office-dismisses-voter-intimidation-allegations-in-tx
  8. https://web.archive.org/web/20210317013013/https://welovetrump.com/2021/02/25/help-pennsylvania-poll-watchers-who-blew-the-whistle-and-are-now-being-attacked/
  9. https://web.archive.org/web/20201110004408/https://politicofire.com/2020/11/09/lawsuit-alleges-election-fraud-in-detroit-provides-sworn-affidavits-by-witnesses/
  10. https://web.archive.org/web/20210120170920/https://theworldtrend.com/what-poll-watchers-actually-do-and-trumps-troubling-rhetoric-about-them-explained
  11. /web/20210412041147/https://www.deception.news/2021-01-04-republican-poll-worker-detroit-disqualify-absentee-ballots.html
  12. https://web.archive.org/web/20201113015635/https://www.businessinsider.com.au/military-veteran-vote-joe-biden-trump-lawsuit-2020-11
  13. https://www.usmessageboard.com/threads/michigan-ag-attempts-felony-intimidation-of-detroitleaks-witness-in-trump-federal-lawsuit-on-mail-in-ballot-challengers.862816/page-2
  14. /web/20210412041539/https://www.usmessageboard.com/threads/michigan-ag-attempts-felony-intimidation-of-detroitleaks-witness-in-trump-federal-lawsuit-on-mail-in-ballot-challengers.862816/page-2 Downloaded elements: 81 Return to Save Page Now

And then some tweets which are now unreachgable being from a suspended account.

‘Poll Workers’, algorithms : from new stories pertaining to the steal

Even though it’s five months since the “selection”, some new stories explaining things further might help understand the mechanism of the steal. Many had noted that “them’s that can’t be seen at night” made up nearly all who were caught on camera actually doing the ballot related crime. They used this to their advantage – their race, to intimidate the white poll observers who were republicans – white republicans are way more likely to back down when large black women are shouting about it – and it made it just that much easier to chase them out of the rooms.

Secondly, this was also used to get the legislatures and others to not vote against certifying – saying that this would disenfranchise blacks to vote against the results as counted by the pickle chip. The blacks are also the reason given for multiple hundreds of precincts with 94-98% for democrat, or for stacks of ballots ALL for Joe Biden. If I were black, I would find that offensive, people thinking my race was so stupid and predictable to vote for someone without even thinking – that many of a race voting for democrats cause that’s what blacks do? But I suppose simpler thinkers are manipulable, and that somehow they had managed to create a narrative of white oppression of blacks,systemic racism, and that somehow criminally altering results and “doing whatever it takes” to place Biden in power was somehow a way to get “justice” for blacks and win against racism. Crazy.

Now it turns out they were paid….here ‘s a story about who hired the many Black Lives Matter who were working that night.

Bill Gates Hired BLM ‘Students’ To Count Ballots In Battleground States

HAFHAFNovember 16, 2020

To ensure that Joe Biden “won” most of the key battleground states, Bill Gates and others in positions of influence replaced veteran poll workers with “young black students,” also known as Black Lives Matter (BLM) terrorists, who committed election fraud for pay.

by Ethan Huff

According to reports, Gates and his cohorts scared the veteran poll workers into fearing infection with the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19), opening the door for young black activists to swoop in and thieve votes for Biden, securing his media-declared “victory.”

Bill Gates Hired Black Lives Matter

“The excuse of COVID-19 was used to scare some elderly poll workers into bowing out and being replaced by these ringers,” writes Shane Trejo for Big League Politics.

The Campus Vote Project, a wing of the Fair Elections Center, received funding from the New Venture Fund to hire on these “young black students” as poll workers.

The New Venture Fund, in case you are unfamiliar with it, received more than $94 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, as well as from other globalist special interest groups such as the Ford Foundation and the Hewlett Foundation.

NBC News first spilled the beans about the “young black students,” indicating that this “diverse group of thousands of younger Americans, ranging from 16-year-old high schoolers to college students” had been tasked with “stepping in as poll workers across the country during early voting and on Election Day.”

Once installed, these “young black students,” with the help of the Poll Workers Project and The Poll Hero Project, engaged in what now appears to be a widespread vote fraud campaign that is trying to steal the election for Biden.

Basketball player Lebron James was also involved in the sham, having worked with both the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and Power the Polls to recruit more young black people to work the polling places in nearly every urban enclave where the vote counts appear to be rigged.

Bill Gates Should Be Charged With Treason

Gates, by the way, has thus far gotten what he wanted with the declared Biden “win.” The billionaire eugenicist was quick to celebrate the results being reported by the media, which has already installed Biden as the “president-elect.”

What this means, of course, is that Gates is complicit in committing treason against our nation.

His money and involvement resulted in multiple states being declared for Biden, handing him a “victory,” even though obvious election fraud took place that necessitates further investigation.

In Nevada, for instance, whistleblowers who have signed sworn affidavits say they observed Gates’ “young black students” telling people who were trying to vote without proper identification to simply apply for whatever they needed from the DMV and bring along the paperwork, even though this is legally unacceptable advice.

“We were told by (my team leader) and two other assistants to advise people who wanted to register to vote and did not have the proper Nevada ID/Driver’s License, that they could go out in the parking lot and make an appointment with the DMV to get a Nevada ID/Driver’s License, and then bring in proof of their appointment confirmation (either a paper copy or shoot it on their phone to us) and then they could be registered,” one of the whistleblowers indicated in a deposition.

“They were then permitted to vote with a provisional ballot, even though their appointments were not until January of 2021. We were told this was being allowed all over the Valley, at all polling places.”

In another instance, a whistleblower witnessed two people opening up mail-in ballot envelopes, filling them out and signing them, and putting them back into official pink and white envelopes as if they were being mailed in from legitimate voters.

“I regularly saw people walking in with multiple ballots,” this whistleblower contends. “We were not allowed to talk to the monitors or observers. We were not supposed to say anything ever to the observers.”