Eric Eggers: Five States Where Voter Fraud Might Change the Presidential Election
Here are five states where voter fraud may impact the election.
Here are five states where voter fraud may impact the election.
GAI‘s Eric Eggers writes: It is vital that whatever legislation Congress might pass to help save the country from the ravages of this virus not infect our democracy with a new disease of its own.
Three statewide races in Florida are headed to a recount and all depend on results from a county whose supervisor of elections has a history of losing ballots and breaking laws by allowing illegal immigrants and felons to vote, as well as illegally destroying ballots.
Voter fraud remains a serious problem in Ohio where more than 5,800 votes were cast in 2016 by Ohio voters whose age in the database is listed as older than 116 years old.
Republican Troy Balderson clings to a narrow margin in last night’s special election for Ohio’s 12th Congressional district, underscoring the impact voter fraud can have in key elections around the country.
What passes for “journalism” today? Washington Post reporter Eli Rosenberg contacted my organization, the Government Accountability Institute, at midnight to comment on an incendiary piece challenging our groundbreaking work on voter fraud. For some strange reason, we were unavailable at that time.
As Americans head to the polls to vote in primaries this month, there has been much discussion about the threats to the American election system, both domestically and from abroad. As as a research director for the Government Accountability Institute (GAI), and the author of “Fraud: How the Left Plans to Steal the Next Election,” I found plenty of evidence of fraud inside our borders. Here are the five things everyone should know as they head to the polls this month.
Last weekend saw the Barclay’s Premier League officially end its 2015-2016 campaign, a season that may well be remembered as the most improbable in English soccer history. Leicester City, which narrowly avoided relegation the season before, and despite boasting a payroll less than one quarter of league heavyweights Chelsea and Manchester United, just won the league in what some are calling the greatest upset in the history of sports.