Sidney Powell Releases the Kraken on Sunday Morning Futures

Alright, show us evidence where dead people just voted in this election

Patience grasshopper. Evidence is presented in court...and according to the process timeline.


FAQ: What happens next in the presidential election process?
November 6, 2020 by Scott Bomboy


The 2020 election contest between President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden seems headed into overtime, as the presidential vote-counting process continues into Friday. Regardless of which candidate claims victory in the election, the odds are good the election will be contested.

As of Friday morning, the races in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, and Pennsylvania were still tightly fought - so close, in fact, that their votes could be subject to a recount in the next month. There are also lawsuits in play about a state’s ability to ask for extended mail-in ballot deadlines, and how ballots were counted.

Here is a brief roadmap to the key deadlines in the presidential election process going forward.

Elections contested within the states (until December 8)

Each state has laws that allow a candidate, including a presidential candidate, to ask for an election recount. In some instances, a recount is automatically started based on the margin separating the top two candidates.

A presidential candidate also can allege voting was conducted or counted in an improper way, and then seek a remedy within the state’s legal system, and in some cases at federal court.

The popular legal blog Lawfare has a list of these different scenarios, including how disputes, recounts, and elector vacancies will be handled within the current battleground states. For example, Nevada allows a candidate to contest an election on at least six grounds, including cases where “Illegal or improper votes were counted, legal and proper votes were not counted, or some combination of the two.”

In Wisconsin, the Trump campaign said on Wednesday it may request a recount, which is permitted when a candidate trails the leading candidate by no more than 1 percent of the total votes cast for that office when at least 4,000 votes were cast.” Additional grounds for a recount include claims by a candidate that “a mistake has been made; fraud has been committed; or another specified defect, irregularity or illegality has occurred.”

A federal law (3 U.S. Code § 5) known as the “safe harbor provision” requires a state to settle these disputes and determine its electors six days before the electoral college members meet in person. In 2020, that deadline is December 8, since the college votes on December 14, 2020

Elections contested in court (until December 14)

While in most cases any dispute at a state level must be resolved by December 8, back in 2000 a divided Supreme Court, in a 5-4 vote, ruled on December 12 in Bush v. Gore, after the safe-harbor date for Florida’s election. The court’s ruling settled a controversy over an automatic recount in Florida and it was issued quickly because of the impending December 14 meeting of the electoral college.

In the current election, according to the Washington Post at least 12 significant presidential-election lawsuits were in federal courts as Election Day started, and another suit was filed on Election Day in suburban Philadelphia about the handling of mail-in ballots. Still more are in the works as of Friday.

Perhaps the most prominent was the emergency request in Republican Party of Pa, v. Boockvar declined by an equally-divided Supreme Court on October 19 that could be heading back to the nine justices at some point. The Republicans sought to have a Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision overturned that allowed for the counting mailed-in ballots received for three days after Election Day in Pennsylvania.

A separate analysis from USA Today found that 230 election-related lawsuits had been filed this year in federal courts through October 2020.

The electoral college meets (December 14)

Of course, the votes for president are actually votes for a slate of electors who cast ballots in the electoral college, a gathering held in the 50 states and the District of Columbia on an appointed day in December after the election.

During the electoral college meetings on December 14, 2020 another possible controversy could involve a faithless elector who decides to cast his or her vote for a different presidential candidate. Some states can disregard a vote cast by a faithless elector. The Supreme Court’s unanimous July 2020 decision in Chiafolo v. Washington affirmed that state laws penalizing or replacing faithless electors are constitutional.

However, not all states have such laws on the books. The website FairVote.org tracks the faithless elector laws across America. It says 33 states and the District of Columbia require electoral college members to cast ballots for a pledged candidate. Among the closely contested states in 2020, FairVote says Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are among the states without faithless elector laws.

The electors’ votes head to Congress (December 23, 2020)

Federal law requires states to deliver certified electoral college results to the vice president, serving as president of the Senate, and other parties by the fourth Wednesday in December; in the year 2020 that date falls on December 23.

What happens if a state misses that deadline and it can’t agree on a way to handle a faithless elector? Or there is a dispute over the election winner between the state lawmakers and a governor, for example?

The federal statute 3 U.S.C. §12, 13 requires the vice president or the Archivist of the United States to compel “secretary of state or equivalent officer” of that state to send the certified election results to Congress, using direct mail or a messenger sent to a federal judge in the state in question, if the judge has the certified election results.

Congress counts the electoral votes (January 6, 2021)

Also under federal law, a joint session of Congress is required by the 12th Amendment to count the electoral votes and declare the winners of the presidential election. That joint session of Congress is held on January 6, 2021 at 1 p.m.

When the results from each state are announced, a member of the House and Senate can jointly object, in writing, to the election results from that state. The House and Senate then adjourn for up to one hour to consider the objection; if both bodies agree to uphold the objection, the votes are excluded from the election results under the terms of the Electoral Count Act of 1887.

There are several scenarios that could allow for this final vote count to be delayed in Congress. One scenario would be if House and Senate agree to exclude a state’s electoral votes, which would then result in a candidate not having the majority of electoral votes. Another would be a faithless elector causing a tie in the electoral college voting.

The 12th Amendment then calls for run-off or contingent elections in the House (to select a president) and the Senate (to select a vice president). Those elections would need to be finished by 12 p.m. on January 20, 2021 for the next president and vice president to take their oaths of office. If that does not happen, the Speaker of the House would serve as president until Congress certifies a winner of the 2020 presidential election.

Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.

More Resources from the National Constitution

The Interactive Constitution

Common Interpretation: The Electoral College

The 12th Amendment

Blog Posts

The 23rd Amendment and the chance of a tied 2020 presidential election

The Constitution and contested presidential elections

Podcasts

Election 2020 in the Courts

Town Hall Videos

America’s Contentious Presidential Elections: A History

Educational Videos

Learning About the Electoral College With Tara Ross (High School/College Session)
https://constitutioncenter.org/blog/faq-what-happens-next-in-the-presidential-election-process
 
That’s pretty funny, you post it, can’t prove it, and then when I show how inane your claims are using one of your hero’s discrediting it, you return with that proves your point, beautiful, as I always say, Trumpkins prove daily why they are such easy prey for demagogues

Gore had 37 days and a few visits to the State SC and the U.S. SC. to make his case.
Patience.
 
Gore lost by 537 votes in one key state.

Trump lost in a massive landslide (his own description of the margins).

At 3a.m., out of nowhere in a select few states where he was winning handily, thousands of unstamped, no postage marked, no sigs, no down-ballot vote ballots, allllllllllll for only Plugs. Um hmmmm.
:laugh:
 
At 3a.m., out of nowhere in a select few states where he was winning handily, thousands of unstamped, no postage marked, no sigs, no down-ballot vote ballots, allllllllllll for only Plugs. Um hmmmm.
:laugh:

I think it's kind of funny that the whole challenge revolves around these supposedly "fishy" circumstances.

Prior to the election, we knew that Dems planned to use mail-in over Republicans by at least a 2 to 1 margin. We also knew that the mail-in would get counted last in most states.

So, nothing "magically" broke for Biden. He ended up getting 60 and even 70% of the mail-in/late count in some states - exactly as anyone who was paying attention, and who understands basic math, expected.
 
I think it's kind of funny that the whole challenge revolves around these supposedly "fishy" circumstances.

Prior to the election, we knew that Dems planned to use mail-in over Republicans by at least a 2 to 1 margin. We also knew that the mail-in would get counted last in most states.

So, nothing "magically" broke for Biden. He ended up getting 60 and even 70% of the mail-in/late count in some states - exactly as anyone who was paying attention, and who understands basic math, expected.

all between 3a.m. & 6a.m., all in one big swoop, all in the sates which are in question now. um-hmmm.
 
At 3a.m., out of nowhere in a select few states where he was winning handily, thousands of unstamped, no postage marked, no sigs, no down-ballot vote ballots, allllllllllll for only Plugs. Um hmmmm.
:laugh:

And the court is going to ask:
What evidence do you have that thousands of ballots were unstamped that should have been stamped? Do ballots dropped in a drop box require a stamp? The court will rule that there is no requirement that ballots have a stamp.

What evidence do you have that thousands of stamped ballots had no postage mark? Are you claiming the ballots with out stamps are the ones without postage marks? The court will rule that the lack of a postage mark does not invalidate a ballot since they could have been hand delivered or dropped in a drop box.

What evidence do you have that there were no signatures on an absentee ballot? Without multiple witnesses to the incident in question the court will not accept your claim since the process was followed and the partisan observers from both side did not see this happen. A signed affidavit by someone that was not in the room or was 30 feet away is not evidence of anything other than perhaps the idiocy of the person signing the affidavit.

What evidence do you have that everyone that voted for the President only, only voted for Biden? Have you personally seen a hundred thousand ballots where this occurred? What law requires anyone to fill out an entire ballot for it to be valid? Since voting for only one race on a ballot is not illegal the court will not accept your claim that this invalidates a ballot.

Your claims are ludicrous on their face and no court is going to accept them since they are nothing but conspiracy theory nonsense.
 
all between 3a.m. & 6a.m., all in one big swoop, all in the sates which are in question now. um-hmmm.

What evidence do you have that the ballots reported between 3am and 6am are not valid ballots? The simple fact that a precinct reported their totals at 5am because that is when the completed their counting is not evidence of anything illegal.
Say a polling place has a line of people at 8pm when they polls close. All of the people in line are by law allowed to vote. If the voting isn't completed until midnight the counting can't start until midnight. That means that those precincts will report later than precincts that had no one in line at 8pm.

The court will not accept the counts being reported between 3m and 6am as evidence of any wrong doing. Simply because you don't like the time period when the reporting was made is not evidence of any illegal acts.
 
At 3a.m., out of nowhere in a select few states where he was winning handily, thousands of unstamped, no postage marked, no sigs, no down-ballot vote ballots, allllllllllll for only Plugs. Um hmmmm.
:laugh:

You make it sound so cloak & dagger.

Again - the mail-in was counted last. They didn't "find a bunch of ballots" - even before the counts on mail-in were done, the networks were all giving reports on exactly how many mail-in were left in each state.

And again - most mail-in broke for Biden. This was no surprise whatsoever.
 
So far, we have 234 pages of sworn affidavits alleging Election irregularities from just ONE county in Michigan. Here are the allegations:

EYEWITNESS saw a batch of ballots where 60% of them had the SAME signature
EYEWITNESS saw a batch of ballots scanned 5 times
EYEWITNESS saw 35 ballots counted that were NOT connected to a voter record
EYEWITNESS saw poll workers marking ballots with NO mark for candidates
VOTER said deceased son was recorded as voting TWICE
EYEWITNESS said provisional ballots were placed in the tabulation box
FAILED software that caused an error in Antrim County used in Wayne County
Republican challengers not readmitted but Democrats admitted
Republican challengers physically pushed from counting tables by officials
Democrats gave out packet: “Tactics to Distract Republican Challengers”
Republican challenges to suspect ballots ignored
 
Want to bet your future participation on this forum on the winner?

Naw, I thought not, pussy.

Like I already told you. I dont want you to have to leave. Going to be much more fun watching the fallout....
 
I've heard the Kraken phrase also in reference to some idiotic Q conspiracy. Are you a Q tard volsrock? You do realize that NOTHING Q has teased has EVER come to fruition?
 
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