Feds bully Pa. USPS whistleblower
Conservatives are outraged over the federal bullying of a U.S. postal worker after he blew the whistle on voter fraud in Pennsylvania.
Feds bully Pa. USPS whistleblower
Conservatives are outraged over the federal bullying of a U.S. postal worker after he blew the whistle on voter fraud in Pennsylvania.
The chairman of the Federal Elections Commission (FEC), Trey Trainor, said reports of voter fraud in key battleground states are credible.
In a recent interview, he pointed out that Democrat officials removing GOP poll watchers from polling locations is a violation of state law and federal court orders.
“When you have claims of, you know, 10,000 people who don’t live in the state of Nevada having voted in Neveda, you have the video…they’re (poll workers) either duplicating a spoiled ballot there or they’re in the process of marking a ballot that came in blank for a vote,” Trainor explained.
The election integrity group True the Vote is suing Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf (D) and Secretary of State Kathryn Boockvar (D), alleging that illegal ballots were counted in four counties across the state in the presidential election.
A lawsuit filed by True the Vote on Tuesday, on behalf of four Pennsylvania voters, alleges that ballots in Philadelphia County, Montgomery County, Delaware County, and Allegheny County were counted in the election despite having been invalid.
The lawsuit asks for ballots from the four counties to be invalidated if it is revealed that a significant number of illegal ballots were counted because such ballots were “mixed in with and cannot be separated from lawful ballots,” according to a True the Vote release.
The majority of Americans said they approve of the President’s job performance in office.
According to a Rasmussen poll on Wednesday, President Trump has a 53 percent approval rating among U.S. voters. Of that number, 43 percent said they strongly approve of his job performance so far.