More Evidence of Voter Fraud as Congress Gears Up for Electoral College Vote Certification?
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UPDATE: Regarding the pallets of fake ballots being destroyed as claimed by Byrne, Georgia election officials have stated that “the boxes seen in photographs contained emergency paper ballots stored in the warehouse as back-ups in the event voting machines failed on election day.”

Mere days before Congress is set to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election on Wednesday, information about the voter fraud that handed Joe Biden a victory continues to arise, despite insistence by the mainstream media that there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud.

Patrick Byrne, founder of OverStock.com and a member of the Trump team who has been working to expose fraud in the election, tweeted on Saturday that footage and photographs were captured of what he claims were fake ballots in Georgia’s Fulton County that were eventually picked up by moving trucks and shredded.

Byrne contended that video footage in his possession shows vans pulling up at 10 o’clock at night after a state Senate subcommittee panel, upon which the ballots were loaded up.

“On Wednesday afternoon in the Georgia Senate Judiciary voted to have these ballots inspected. What happened next?,” Byrne wrote in a tweet,

Byrne also claimed that his people obtained samples of the fake ballots.

The statistical case against Joe Biden also keeping mounting.

For example, a new analysis posted to Rumble by BasedMedia and DonaldWon.com noted that Joe Biden was given a five-percent advantage over President Trump in counties using Dominion voting machines.

The analysis reads:

Analysis conducted by DataScience and released through BASEDmedia constructed a statistical model to predict relative performance for either candidate based upon U.S. Census county data to 90% accuracy.

This analysis revealed that counties that used Dominion and Hart InterCivic ballot counting devices and software consistently gave a 5% vote advantage to candidate Joe Biden over President Trump. This advantage was observed regardless of the county’s majority political party affiliation nor urban, suburban, or rural area demographics.

Congress will vote to certify the 50 states’ Electoral College votes on Wednesday, January 6, but some Republican lawmakers are planning efforts to reject these results due to the lingering shadow of fraud.

One effort, led by Representative Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) in the House and joined by Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) in the Senate, seeks to force a debate regarding electoral tallies.

“We have no congressional investigation of the fraud,” Hawley said of his participation in the effort. “We need it. We’ve had no congressional action. We need that to protect our elections going forward. I will make all these points and try to force a debate about all of these points.”

Firing back at critics who say he is attempting to subvert the electoral system, Hawley pointed out that Democrats have taken such action before.

In 2005, for example, then-Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) objected to Ohio electors during the 2005 certification of President George W. Bush’s reelection and defeat of John Kerry.

“First of all, I don’t hear the Democrats making such outrageous claims when they were the ones who were objecting during the electoral college certification in 2004 and 2016. Democrats have done this for years to raise concerns about election integrity,” Hawley said on Fox News. “Now when Republicans and 74 million Americans have concerns about election integrity, we are supposed to sit down and shut up? Somebody has to stand up here.”

A separate effort led by Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) involves a number of Republican senators who say they will block certification of the electoral results unless there is an emergency 10-day audit by an electoral commission.

“Voter fraud has posed a persistent challenge in our elections, although its breadth and scope are disputed,” Cruz and the other senators maintained in a Saturday statement. “By any measure, the allegations of fraud and irregularities in the 2020 election exceed any in our lifetimes.”

On Saturday, Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, Marc Short, said his boss shared “the concerns of millions of Americans about voter fraud and irregularities.”

The vice president “welcomes the efforts of members of the House and Senate to use the authority they have under the law to raise objections and bring forward evidence before the Congress and the American people.”

As president of the senate, Pence will have the responsibility of overseeing the January 6 session, which has caused some of the president’s proponents to argue that the vice president should use this opportunity to reject electoral votes from fraud-ridden states.