Trump likely won the 2020 election after all
Chris Talgo February 09, 2024
After extensive analysis using raw survey data coupled with
mail-in vote totals, we concluded that mail-in voter fraud almost certainly
changed the 2020 election outcome in all six crucial swing states.
According to the legacy news networks, social media
platforms, various deep state actors, and other corrupt institutions, the 2020
election was the safest and most secure in history and anyone who questioned
Joe Biden’s victory was a wacky “election denier.”
That has been the dominant narrative for the past three
years, which has produced a chilling effect and caused many to forgo conducting
a deep dive concerning whether the 2020 election really was as safe and secure
as we have been told it was.
In reality, the 2020 election was most likely marred by
widespread mail-in voting fraud. And even worse, the extensive mail-in voter
fraud almost certainly tipped the election in favor of Joe Biden.
In other words, had rampant mail-in voter fraud been
prevented in the 2020 election, Donald Trump would have won the Electoral
College and been re-elected to a second term.
At this point, you may be wondering how I can be so sure
that the 2020 election was tainted by mail-in voter fraud. The answer is
simple: The voters have told us so.
In late 2023, the Heartland Institute and Rasmussen Reports
conducted a simple survey to gauge the degree of voter fraud in the 2020
election. We asked 1,085 voters who participated in the 2020 election about
their voting behaviors three years prior. To our surprise, the results showed
that at least one in five mail-in voters admitted to committing ballot fraud in
the 2020 election.
Our findings caused quite a stir in the media, especially
among those who suspected the 2020 election was not completely secure due to
the dubious changes to voting rules state officials unconstitutionally imposed
under the cover of COVID-19.
Shortly after the poll was released, former President Trump
called it “the most important poll released in the last 20 years” and “the
biggest story of the year.”
Eventually, we began to wonder if we could apply the poll
results to publicly available election data to determine whether mail-in voter
fraud impacted the outcome of the election. This was no easy task.
After extensive analysis using the raw survey data provided
by Rasmussen coupled with state-based and other reputable sources documenting
mail-in vote totals, we concluded that mail-in voter fraud almost certainly
changed the 2020 election outcome in all six of the crucial swing states.
This is all laid out in great detail in the Heartland
Institute’s latest policy study, aptly titled “Who Really Won the 2020
Election?” (Spoiler alert: not Joe Biden.)
Here are just a few of the main takeaways:
Upon further analysis of the Rasmussen survey data, we found
that more than one in four mail-in voters (28.2%, to be precise) admitted to
committing at least one kind of election fraud in the 2020 election.
Under multiple scenarios, with differing rates of mail-in
voter fraud taken into account, our results indicate that Trump would have won
the Electoral College in the 2020 election had fraudulent mail-in ballots not
been counted.
Even if the level of fraud detected in the
Heartland/Rasmussen survey substantially overstated mail-in voter fraud by
multiple orders of magnitude, Trump would likely still have won the 2020
election.
According to the official 2020 election results, Biden
defeated Trump in the Electoral College 306 to 232. The national vote tally was
similarly lopsided, with Biden receiving approximately 81 million votes to
Trump’s 74 million votes.
But the 2020 election, like most recent national elections,
was ultimately decided in the swing states.
In 2020, Biden won each of the six swing states by fewer
than 20,000 votes, a tiny margin in the context of the overall vote.
But here’s the rub: When we extrapolated for mail-in voter
fraud in the six crucial swing states, using state-specific mail-in voter data
and accounting for a variety of fraud rates (from the 28% level all the way
down to the 1% level), the Electoral College vote changed considerably.
In almost all the hypothetical scenarios we lay out, Trump
would have won enough Electoral College votes to defeat Biden soundly. In other
words, Biden’s Electoral College victory, although seemingly large, was
predicated on razor-thin margins in all six of the swing states.
We know for a fact that each of the six swing states changed
its election rules in the months leading up to the 2020 election to allow for
mass mail-in voting based on inaccurate state voter registration rolls. We also
know that several of these states made it easy for mail-in voting fraud to be
committed by eliminating common-sense guardrails like signature verification
and permitting shady election practices to take place like ballot harvesting.
So it stands to reason that these unprecedented last-minute
changes to voting procedures likely resulted in a flood of fraudulent ballots
being counted. It also stands to reason that widespread mail-in voter fraud in
the 2020 election disproportionately benefitted Joe Biden, seeing that he
received more than twice as many mail-in votes as Trump.
When considering all these factors, it seems obvious that
Biden’s 2020 victory was aided and abetted by rampant mail-in voter fraud. But
as they say, what’s done is done. It does no good to cry over spilled milk or
shady elections.
With less than nine months before the 2024 presidential
election, however, we must ensure that this does not happen again. It is
incumbent upon the 50 states to ensure that their voting systems are as safe
and secure as possible. We still have time to make necessary changes.
Going forward, will enough states do the right thing? Or,
like so many other things in today’s upside-down world, is the quaint American
tradition of free and fair elections a vestige of the past?
No comments:
Post a Comment