This week, a conservative woman went to vote Republican in her district. She walked into the voting booth and proceeded to vote for Republicans. However, the machine blocked her from doing so.
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When she asked the voting volunteer why she couldn't vote for her party, the attendant said she could only vote Democrat that day.
WATCH:
This is a HUGE problem! Fix it now or plan on 2020 being stolen! Paper in person voting only with Republican Representatives with authority at every voting place! No Electronics machines! @realDonaldTrump @GOPChairwoman @SenateGOP @GOP @GOPLeader pic.twitter.com/RWs3NFp7yM— O Sultz (@otweetie) July 13, 2020
In addition to this, Politifact uncovered a voting scandal in Kentucky. Democrats reduce the number of available voting centers so they can defeat Mitch McConnell. Imaging going to vote only to find out your vote is being blocked.
Here is what Politifact wrote:
In the days leading up to Kentucky’s June 23 primary, national figures raised alarms about the state’s Election Day voting infrastructure.Film director Ava Duvernay tweeted, "Kentucky has used Covid-19 as an excuse to slash polling places for Tuesday’s vital primary to defeat #MitchMcConnell." Former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams tweeted, "Voter suppression is no longer billy clubs & Jim Crow. It’s closed polling sites + 6 hr waits for w/o pay. COVID is no excuse." And NBA superstar LeBron James tweeted, "This is SYSTEMIC RACISM and OPPRESSION. So angry man."One frequently shared image summarized the numbers for many social media users:"Ahead of tomorrow’s primary in Kentucky, many polling locations have been closed -- with only one polling location in Jefferson County (the county with the largest Black population in the state). This is voter suppression."It’s too soon to say what impact these changes will have on voter turnout. However, many of these posts leave out context about the significantly expanded role of mail-ballot access and early voting in this year’s Kentucky primary.The day before the primary, Louisville NAACP President Raoul Cunningham told the Louisville Courier-Journal that he disagreed with the reductions in the number of polling places, but he praised the expanded mail and early-voting options. "I was concerned if the African American vote would be suppressed, but I really don't think it will be," Cunningham said.
Is there a question in your mind whether or not voter fraud exists?


