I canāt lie. When I first heard former President Trumpās claim that dead people were casting ballots in the election, my imagination raced. In my head, Zombies rose out of the grave on Election day; they headed to a ballot place and started pressing buttons. Then, I thought, if this was even remotely true, what would Trumpās campaign pitch be to swing the Walking Dead vote in his favor.
Back to reality. On a call to Secretary of State Brad Raffenspergerās office on January 2, Trump tried to overturn the election stating this craziness:
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āThe other thing, dead people. So dead people voted. And I think the number is in the … close to 5,000 people,ā Mr Trump told Mr Raffensperger. āAnd they went to obituaries. They went to all sorts of methods to come up with an accurate number. And a minimum is close to about 5,000 voters.ā
Well, some newspaper reporters did some counting and low and behold, itās not 5,000. Itās not even close to that number.
The Atlanta Journal-ConstitutionĀ found that just four of the over 4 million ballots cast were signed by a voter who had died, all of them sent by relatives of the deceased. To add further:
In one case, a 74-year-old widow submitted an absentee ballot on behalf of her husband, William Nelson, after he died in September 2020.
āHe was going to vote Republican, and she said, āWell, Iām going to cancel your ballot because Iām voting Democrat.ā It was kind of a joke between them,ā Barry Bishop, an attorney for Sharon Nelson of Canton, told the State Election Board. āShe received the absentee ballot and carried out his wishes. … She now realizes that was not the thing to do.ā
So, no, we donāt have to add the zombie party to the census just yet. Itās another lie about the 2020 election that we can file away in the case closed drawer.
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