BREAKING: Election Investigators Discover Enough Illegal Votes In Georgia To Possibly Tip 2020 Results

OPINION | This article contains commentary that reflects the author's opinion.

New evidence has revealed that there were at least 10,300 illegal votes that were cast in Georgia during the 2020 general election, according to The Federalist.

This evidence does not change the fact that Joe Biden is currently the President of The United States.

However, this should encourage Americans to become more involved and interested in free and fair elections.

Due to COVID-19 there were many absentee ballots sent in.

“It was disconcerting to see the media and the courts largely ignore serious issues like these, especially since the data I was seeing showed very legitimate issues.”

“In fact, I heard members of the Secretary of State’s team admit some votes were cast with residency issues, but then claimed there weren’t enough of them to cast the outcome of the election in doubt.”

“That was not at all what I was seeing, and as far as I am aware the Secretary of State’s Office has never put an actual number on the ones they did see.”

“That number continues to increase every day as more and more people update their registrations.”

“I have little doubt that the total number will eventually meet and then exceed President Biden’s margin of victory in Georgia.”

“Under Georgia law, a judge can order an election be redone if he or she sees there were enough illegal, irregular, or improperly rejected votes to cast the results of the election in doubt, or if they see evidence of ‘systemic irregularities.'”

“These issues were absolutely systemic, they occurred in every county in the state, in every state house, state senate, and in every congressional district in the state.”

“An election should be overturned either if (1) more votes than decided the election were illegal, wrongfully rejected or irregular, or (2) when there were systemic irregularities that cast in doubt the results of the election.”

“When a person updates their voter registration to a new address, they are informing the county board of elections and correspondingly the Secretary of State that they regard the new address as their legal residence,”

“There is no need to have access to Social Security numbers or birth dates,.”

“Every voter has a unique eight-digit voter identification number.”

“I provided this exact same information to Frances Watson, the chief investigator for the secretary of state.”

From The Federalist:

The Data Speaks for Itself
When Davis ran the data, he found that, of the approximately 35,000 Georgians who indicated they had moved from one county to another county more than 30 days before the November general election, as of May, more than 10,300 had updated their voter registration information, providing the secretary of state the exact address they had previously provided to the USPS. Those same 10,000-plus individuals all also cast ballots in the county in which they had previously lived.

Evans, who holds the distinction of being the only lawyer in Georgia history to successfully overturn two elections in the same race, concurred. Under Georgia law, Evans explained, “an election should be overturned either if (1) more votes than decided the election were illegal, wrongfully rejected or irregular, or (2) when there were systemic irregularities that cast in doubt the results of the election.”

Davis’s data proves significant because critics of Trump’s challenge to the certification of Georgia’s election results framed the NCOA information as either unreliable or of an insufficient magnitude to cast the outcome of the election in doubt. But by updating their voter registration information with the same address as contained in the NCOA database, the voters themselves have established the reliability of that information.

Further, by updating their address for purposes of their voter registration, these same voters are confirming their move is not temporary. “When a person updates their voter registration to a new address, they are informing the county board of elections and correspondingly the Secretary of State that they regard the new address as their legal residence,” Evans explained.