Mystified Why Trump Keeps Criticizing Georgia Republicans? Here’s the Answer
Posted on | August 6, 2024 | Comments Off on Mystified Why Trump Keeps Criticizing Georgia Republicans? Here’s the Answer
Was the 2020 election stolen? That’s a yes or no question.
Were I called to testify under oath, I’d have to answer yes.
I’ve talked to friends in Georgia who tell stories of “ballot harvesting” there, and this is completely apart from the arguably unconstitutional rule change that allowed universal vote-by-mail in my native state. (The Constitution gives state legislatures the authority to establish election procedures. The Georgia legislature never changed the law; instead, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger implemented universal vote-by-mail on his own authority, without legislative approval.) We know for a fact that Mark Zuckerberg poured millions into Georgia election activism, specifically in the metro Atlanta area — Clayton, DeKalb, Douglas, Fulton and Gwinnett counties — and every Republican who watched the way the official results were reported on Election Night said, “Shenanigans!”
So, yes, I sincerely believe Democrats stole the 2020 election, but that doesn’t make me a “conspiracy theorist,” because I don’t claim to have any detailed proof of how Democrats stole the election. There are people who do make such claims, however, and I have neither the time nor interest to investigate their claims. The media is quick to label any such claim as having been “debunked,” and I don’t care to investigate the alleged “debunking,” either, since it’s neither here nor there in terms of my own general belief about Democratic shenanigans in 2020.
While I have the luxury of being agnostic toward any specific detailed claims regarding 2020 election fraud, others are less fortunate. You see, the whole “J6 insurrection” controversy, including the federal prosecution of Capitol riot participants, as well as legal proceedings against Trump and his allies, are premised on two basic propositions: (a) that the 2020 election was entirely legitimate, and (b) that no reasonable person could believe otherwise. Whereas Trump’s supporters claim they were victims of a political crime, the prosecution of Trump’s supporters portrays them as perpetrators of such a crime, and it is crucial to the defense of anyone so accused to establish that they were acting on a sincere belief that the 2020 election was stolen.
All of this is necessary to understanding why, in his Atlanta rally Saturday, “Trump assailed [Gov. Brian] Kemp in a roughly 10-minute tirade,” as the Associated Press described it. Kemp denies that there is any reason to doubt Joe Biden won Georgia four years ago, and in doing so, effectively sides with Fani Willis in her argument that Trump and his allies were guilty of a crime in trying to prevent certification of that alleged Democratic victory. Some of my conservative friends are perplexed by Trump’s public criticisms of Kemp (and Raffensperger), and certainly it can be argued that airing such intra-party conflicts in the late stages of a crucial election campaign is, uh . . . less than optimal, strategically speaking. (I’m sure my friend Dianna Deeley in Valdosta can speak of less-than-optimal intra-party conflicts locally.)
Those of us who can afford to be agnostic about the specifics of election fraud in 2020 may be tempted to cast aspersions on those who are not so fortunately situated: Why are they so obsessed with this topic? Well, if a prosecutor was trying to put you in prison, you might be “obsessed,” too. And it’s not just Trump. His former spokeswoman and longtime “War Room” contributor Liz Harrington called attention to the ongoing battle between Trump’s supporters and the Georgia Election Board.
Raffensperger’s general counsel Charlene McGowan claims it’s “inconclusive” whether the 3,125 duplicates were counted (since increased to 3,930).
Intentional lie. All they had to do was check the Cast Vote Record. They didn’t want to admit that they were counted as >6,250 votes pic.twitter.com/nIFUIPRwyA
— Liz Harrington (@realLizUSA) July 26, 2024
The Secretary of State office claims the Elections Group and Ryan Macias were authorized consultants for Fulton County in 2020.
Except the Department of Registration and Elections didn’t sign off on this. pic.twitter.com/cVLpNB3YNt
— Liz Harrington (@realLizUSA) July 26, 2024
You can read the entire complaint, alleging “under the penalty of perjury that the evidence and records are conclusive — Fulton County’s 2020 General Election Recount was intentionally and fraudulently manipulated.” As I say, I don’t have any interest in such details — my eyes glaze over — but then again, no one is trying to put me in prison for my beliefs about election shenanigans. At least not yet, but if Democrats steal the next election, too, maybe we’ll all get locked up. Then we’ll have plenty of time, sitting in jail awaiting trial, to be “obsessed” about it.
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