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Saturday, July 17, 2021

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger Calls for Fulton County Elections Officials To Be Fired


According to Resist the Mainstream:
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger argued that two high-profile election officials in Fulton County should be fired after recent revelations regarding the 2020 presidential election.

The story:


Raffensperger called on local officials on Thursday to remove Rick Barron, the Fulton elections director, and Ralph Jones, the registration chief, from their positions.

His statement came after it was revealed that a certain number of ballots in the county were double-counted during the 2020 presidential election. Earlier this week, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that around 200 ballots in Fulton County were scanned twice before a recount of the presidential election.

Raffensperger also said on his Twitter account:
"Fulton County’s continued failures have gone on long enough with no accountability. Rick Barron and Ralph Jones, Fulton’s registration chief, must be fired and removed from Fulton’s elections leadership immediately. Fulton’s voters and the people of Georgia deserve better."
Whoa, Raffie, weren't you the one that tried to set up Donald J. Trump saying he repeatedly pressured you to somehow change the results in the state to deliver him a victory?

Here's the phone call in question, sir:



I think President Trump knew there was a problem and he was merely giving you a chance to do the right thing. No pressure...but you were in tight with the cabal and thought you could get away with the fraud by throwing Trump under the bus!

As I recall the Washington Post had to walk back that lie:
On January 3, the Washington Post’s Amy Gardner broke the news that, in an hourlong recorded phone call, President Donald Trump repeatedly pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to somehow change the results in the state to deliver him a victory. The Post published the full audio and transcript of that call, and it received enormous media attention.

Six days later, in the wake of the storming of the Capitol, Gardner broke a follow-up story revealing that Trump had a similar phone call with another Georgia official, Raffensperger’s lead investigator Frances Watson. This time around, there was no audio or transcript of that call available, so Gardner’s story was attributed to an an anonymous state official. The official claimed that, on the call, Trump said Watson should “find the fraud” and could become a “national hero” by doing so.

But according to a newly surfaced recording of the call with Watson, Trump did not in fact use those exact words. He did say she could find “dishonesty” in Fulton County, and that “when the right answer comes out, you’ll be praised.” But the language of the quotes the Post attributed to Trump were not accurate. As a result, the Post had to run a prominent correction. Trump and conservatives are now scorning the paper, and even some mainstream reporters are looking askance and wondering how it happened. The correction was merited — it’s important for reporters (and their sources) to be careful in attributing exact language in quotes. And it is unfortunate that these incorrect quotes spread so widely. (Vox also wrote about the Post story in an article that has now been corrected.)
The buck stops at your door, Raffensperger for you are the current Secretary of State.

Prior to the January 3rd newspaper "leak" would have been the time for you to get some cojones and fire your subordinates while at the same time conducting an honest audit!

Instead, the ballots were discovered AFTER voters sued to review them.

We, the people, want fair; honest elections. We should not have to sue government to get the truth...you work for us!  You can pick up your pink slip any time now!

Let that be a lesson to all politicians, kissing ass now will not be sufficient to survive your political careers!

We have it ALL...what part of ALL do these stupid people not understand?

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