• Please be sure to read the rules and adhere to them. Some banned members have complained that they are not spammers. But they spammed us. Some even tried to redirect our members to other forums. Duh. Be smart. Read the rules and adhere to them and we will all get along just fine. Cheers. :beer: Link to the rules: https://www.forumsforums.com/threads/forum-rules-info.2974/

AUDIT Maelstrom Headed for TEXAS Democrat-Heavy Counties?!

300 H and H

Bronze Member
GOLD Site Supporter
13:43 min.


Rekieta Law

165K subscribers

Audits in Maricopa County have sparked interest in other states, and now they may be moving to Texas. Texas Congressman Steve Toth(R) has introduced legislation with 15 other Republicans to audit the 13 biggest counties in Texas. The media is not a fan of this. Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/state-wa..------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Two You Tubes in a row. This is surprising censorship. :furious: Click on the link in the description for the original article.
 

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
GOLD Site Supporter
Not sure why the videos are not available.

Here is an article I found on the topic.


Texas Republicans propose audit of Democrat-heavy counties

A Texas Republican who tried to void more than 125,000 legally cast ballots in last year’s election has introduced legislation in the state House of Representatives that would force a forensic audit of the 2020 election results in the state’s largest counties.
State Rep. Steve Toth (R) has introduced legislation along with 15 other Republicans that would require Gov. Greg Abbott (R), Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R) and state House Speaker Dade Phelan (R) to hire an outside expert to conduct a forensic audit of counties with populations greater than 415,000.
The bill would order an audit of every precinct in those large counties. It would require Texas leaders to submit a report by next year outlining issues with the balloting or counting process.
Among the bill’s co-sponsors are Rep. Briscoe Cain (R), the head of the state House Elections Committee and author of a sweeping overhaul of election rules pending before the state House; state Rep. Tom Oliverson (R), vice chairman of the House Republican Caucus; and Jake Ellzey (R), one of the finalists to replace the late Rep. Ron Wright (R) in the U.S. House of Representatives in a special election to take place next week.
Texas has 13 counties with populations greater than 415,000 residents. President Biden won 10 of them, though former President Trump carried Texas’s 38 electoral votes by a nearly 6-point margin.
“We need a forensic audit to uncover all the voter fraud,” Toth said in a statement. “Texans want to know more about the claims of voter fraud and deserve to have confidence in their elections.”
Toth did not address the root of those claims of voter fraud, many of which have come from Republicans and from Trump himself, none of whom have offered evidence of widespread voter fraud or election malfeasance.
Attorney General Ken Paxton’s (R) office says it is in the process of prosecuting 43 individuals for a combined 510 cases of alleged voter or election fraud. Those cases are spread over multiple elections.
The calls for a forensic audit are unlikely to advance through a special session in Austin that is already consumed by the drama of a group of House Democrats who have escaped to Washington to prevent votes on an omnibus overhaul of state election law they say would hinder the right of minorities and low-income residents to vote.
But it is part of a growing trend of Republican states heeding Trump’s insistence that they find evidence that he won an election he lost. Arizona’s Republican-led state Senate is set to begin a new recount of votes cast in Maricopa County, after they hired an outside firm with no election auditing experience to conduct an initial count. Republican legislators in Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan and elsewhere are calling for forensic audits in other states Trump lost last year.
Both Toth and Paxton have dabbled in election conspiracy theories advanced by Trump, whose attorneys and advocates have failed repeatedly to provide any evidence of the fraud or wrongdoing he has so often alleged.
In November, Toth joined a conservative activist in suing to throw out more than 125,000 ballots cast at drive-through voting locations in Harris County, alleging the county clerk exceeded his authority by setting up stations that were not explicitly permitted by state law. The Texas Supreme Court ruled against Toth in the days before November’s general election.
Paxton appeared and spoke at the Jan, 6 “Stop the Steal” rally that preceded the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. He has refused to release details of his travel, including whether taxpayers footed the bill for the trip, to local media.
 

FrancSevin

Proudly Deplorable
GOLD Site Supporter
Not sure why the videos are not available.

Here is an article I found on the topic.


Texas Republicans propose audit of Democrat-heavy counties

A Texas Republican who tried to void more than 125,000 legally cast ballots in last year’s election has introduced legislation in the state House of Representatives that would force a forensic audit of the 2020 election results in the state’s largest counties.
State Rep. Steve Toth (R) has introduced legislation along with 15 other Republicans that would require Gov. Greg Abbott (R), Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R) and state House Speaker Dade Phelan (R) to hire an outside expert to conduct a forensic audit of counties with populations greater than 415,000.
The bill would order an audit of every precinct in those large counties. It would require Texas leaders to submit a report by next year outlining issues with the balloting or counting process.
Among the bill’s co-sponsors are Rep. Briscoe Cain (R), the head of the state House Elections Committee and author of a sweeping overhaul of election rules pending before the state House; state Rep. Tom Oliverson (R), vice chairman of the House Republican Caucus; and Jake Ellzey (R), one of the finalists to replace the late Rep. Ron Wright (R) in the U.S. House of Representatives in a special election to take place next week.
Texas has 13 counties with populations greater than 415,000 residents. President Biden won 10 of them, though former President Trump carried Texas’s 38 electoral votes by a nearly 6-point margin.
“We need a forensic audit to uncover all the voter fraud,” Toth said in a statement. “Texans want to know more about the claims of voter fraud and deserve to have confidence in their elections.”
Toth did not address the root of those claims of voter fraud, many of which have come from Republicans and from Trump himself, none of whom have offered evidence of widespread voter fraud or election malfeasance.
Attorney General Ken Paxton’s (R) office says it is in the process of prosecuting 43 individuals for a combined 510 cases of alleged voter or election fraud. Those cases are spread over multiple elections.
The calls for a forensic audit are unlikely to advance through a special session in Austin that is already consumed by the drama of a group of House Democrats who have escaped to Washington to prevent votes on an omnibus overhaul of state election law they say would hinder the right of minorities and low-income residents to vote.
But it is part of a growing trend of Republican states heeding Trump’s insistence that they find evidence that he won an election he lost. Arizona’s Republican-led state Senate is set to begin a new recount of votes cast in Maricopa County, after they hired an outside firm with no election auditing experience to conduct an initial count. Republican legislators in Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan and elsewhere are calling for forensic audits in other states Trump lost last year.
Both Toth and Paxton have dabbled in election conspiracy theories advanced by Trump, whose attorneys and advocates have failed repeatedly to provide any evidence of the fraud or wrongdoing he has so often alleged.
In November, Toth joined a conservative activist in suing to throw out more than 125,000 ballots cast at drive-through voting locations in Harris County, alleging the county clerk exceeded his authority by setting up stations that were not explicitly permitted by state law. The Texas Supreme Court ruled against Toth in the days before November’s general election.
Paxton appeared and spoke at the Jan, 6 “Stop the Steal” rally that preceded the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. He has refused to release details of his travel, including whether taxpayers footed the bill for the trip, to local media.
This article drips with partisan BS.

I'm not suggesting it isn't credible. I am suggesting it is "incredible."

I highlighted what I consider suspicious statements and claims.
The "No Evidence" claim is mostly based on the fact that a majority of judges have refused to hear "any evidence" summarily dismissing the allegations. This is a national phenome and is rampant in the left leaning press and dogmas. Stated as they do, it is technically not a lie yet completely misleading as there is ample evidence of malfeasance and corruption in the voting process.

We need to address suspicions' and find truths if we are to have confidence in the process. No Democracy can stand if the people who vote cannot count on it's veracity. The left may well be happy with the reported outcome of the 2020 Presidential election, but they should fear the same stunt could be pulled on them.

That should never be the case here in America.
 

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
GOLD Site Supporter
That article is from THE HILL. Clearly a left leaning source, but largely credible, even if obviously biased. Read past the bias.
 

FrancSevin

Proudly Deplorable
GOLD Site Supporter
That article is from THE HILL. Clearly a left leaning source, but largely credible, even if obviously biased. Read past the bias.
Will do of course. I would ask you to do the same.

If it is on the internet, it must be true, right?


BS

Nothing on the internet stands alone as truthful. It is both sad and dangerous that we in the public cannot trust a news source. Any news source.`

The news media once reported that former AG Bill Barr claimed he never saw any evidence of voter fraud. That was not a lie. In truth however, he admittedly never looked for it.. Virtually all the media reported the first but not the last.

So I must say, as the founders repeated incessantly, "never trust the government." Sadly, they did not warn us about the media becoming part of that government.
 
Top