We heard a lot about ACORN and voter fraud before the election. Now, we hear virtually nothing. Are we just going to let voter fraud go unchallenged? It seems so.
Right before our eyes, it appears Al Franken is stealing the election in Minnesota*: (Emphasis mine)
When Minnesotans woke up last Wednesday, Republican Senator Norm
Coleman led Mr. Franken by 725 votes. By that evening, he was ahead by
only 477. As of yesterday, Mr. Coleman's margin stood at 206. This
lopsided bleeding of Republican votes is passing strange considering
that the official recount hasn't even begun.
The vanishing Coleman vote came during a week in which election
officials are obliged to double-check their initial results. ... In a normal audit,
these mistakes could be expected to cut both ways. Instead, nearly
every "fix" has gone for Mr. Franken, in some cases under strange
circumstances.
For example, there was Friday night's announcement by Minneapolis's
director of elections that she'd forgotten to count 32 absentee ballots
in her car. The Coleman campaign scrambled to get a county judge to
halt the counting of these absentees, since it was impossible to prove
their integrity 72 hours after the polls closed. The judge refused on
grounds that she lacked jurisdiction.
Up in Two Harbors, another liberal outpost, Mr. Franken picked up an
additional 246 votes. In Partridge Township, he racked up another 100.
Election officials in both places claim they initially miscommunicated
the numbers. Odd, because in the Two Harbors precinct, none of the
other contests recorded any changes in their vote totals.
According to conservative statistician John Lott, Mr. Franken's
gains so far are 2.5 times the corrections made for Barack Obama in the
state, and nearly three times the gains for Democrats across Minnesota
Congressional races. ...Franken's "new" votes
equal more than all the changes for all the precincts in the entire
state for the Presidential, Congressional and statehouse races combined
(482 votes).
...The Franken campaign has also been wrapping itself around Barack
Obama's popularity to increase its recount potential. Minnesota has a
voter intent law, which means that election officials can take a second
look at ambiguous ballots. Mr. Franken's people are already arguing
that a vote for Mr. Obama certainly indicated a vote for Mr. Franken.
This can't possibly be true, ... on Election Day he [Franken] trailed [Obama] by 12.2%.
After 100% of votes counted in Minnesota, they find 519 more for Franken before any recount even begins? Can you believe that? I guess if your party wants a 60 member filibuster proof majority, anything is possible.
Other cases of voter fraud: 100,000 registered in Georgia, Florida and Ohio:
Georgia's Secretary of State has launched a full investigation and may
seek criminal charges against three Georgia men who appear to have
early-voted twice.
“This is extraordinarily disturbing," said Secretary of State Karen Handel.
A
team of investigative journalists from WSB-TV in Atlanta, WFTV in
Orlando and WFTS in Tampa and WCPO in Cincinnati compared Georgia's
voter rolls with those in Florida and Ohio and found more than 100,000
people who appear to be registered to vote in more than one state, with
no government oversight to catch it.
Closer to home, Milwaukee, Two Votes, One Lame Excuse:
Her name is Edna Byrd, 51 years old, and she admits she voted
absentee days before the election and then showed up on Election Day.
She was given a ballot and voted again.
She committed a felony. Do you charge her, or not? WISN video
If we would ever get a handle on voter fraud, double voters would be felons. Felons aren't allowed to vote for a time!
*Who is instigating this stretching of the rules? Is it Al Franken's campaign itself or the officials in charge of the election process? In this case, it's Franken. Franken seeks access to rejected absentee data
Please, comment content should relate to the subject of the post. Although I try to respond to many, do not interpret my lack of a response as agreement.
Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Vicki Mckenna,
Jay Weber, The Right View Wisconsin, Mark Levin, CNS News