• If you are having problems logging in please use the Contact Us in the lower right hand corner of the forum page for assistance.

Another Minnesota election

Tam

Well-known member
Minnesota AGAIN. :roll: Their election is ending in a recount and there are reports of one county loosing 60,000 ballots that misteriously showed up before the official count started. :shock: AND guess who is reported to have won. :wink: Yep you got it the DEMS.
 

Steve

Well-known member
He called it unusual that Emmer trailed even as Republicans knocked off an 18-term Democratic member of Congress and took control of both houses of the Legislature, a first since state lawmakers started organizing by political party in 1972.

"Something doesn't smell right," Sutton said.
 

Lonecowboy

Well-known member
stacking the deck-

Billionaire George Soros, the Hungarian-born businessman known for bankrolling liberal causes, saw a slew of his pet projects and candidates get wiped out in the Republican-red tide on Tuesday.

Not only did Soros-sponsored MoveOn.org call the results "devastating," his Secretary of State Project suffered its worst losses since its founding in 2006.

The Secretary of State Project, which sprouted out of the Soros-backed Democracy Alliance, was built as a vehicle to support "reform-minded" candidates for secretary of state. Since these often-overlooked officials have authority over state election rules, they can play a huge role in close or disputed political contests.

Though the initiative went four-for-four in the 2008 election, only two of its seven endorsed candidates won their races on Tuesday. The trend coincided with historic losses for Democrats at the state and federal level. Republicans seized the U.S. House of Representatives, picked up at least six seats in the U.S. Senate, won a majority of the gubernatorial races and made a net gain of more than 500 state-level legislative seats.

The Secretary of State Project, in a message to supporters on its home page, chalked up its losses to the overarching electoral trend.

"2010 was a tough year. We helped re-elect Mark Ritchie in Minnesota and Debra Bowen in California, but our candidates in other states -- incumbents and challengers alike -- were all defeated in the Republican wave election," the group said.

Ritchie, who beat Republican Dan Severson, gained notoriety among conservatives during the recount for the 2008 Minnesota Senate election, which he eventually handed to Al Franken over Republican Norm Coleman. Ritchie could soon have another recount on his hands with the close and undecided gubernatorial race between Mark Dayton and Tom Emmer.
 

Tam

Well-known member
Until the voters start looking at the past elections and remembering the voter fraud, corruption, the party who has been involved and the money behind the corruption IE Soros and the Unions, things will not change. People have to hold candidates responsible for the people they except money from. Anyone taking Soros money should be defeated just for the fact that Soros has used his money and influence to destroy other countries to line his greedy pockets with billions. But as long as people forget and Soros funds elections there will be CORRUPTION.
 

Tam

Well-known member
Conn. is going to have a recount too. AND there are reports of ballots going missing and showing back up later. I believe any ballot bags that do not stay within the hands of the returning officer of the polling station should not be counted. If a bag or two go missing can anyone guarantee that the ballots have not been tampered with or ballots added.

Anyone thinking ballots can't be tampered with need to remember the Minnesota election where there was more ballots than registered voters in some polling stations. How do you explain that?
 
Top