Reply To: Re: Election Fraud, How would we know?

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Oh Charlie, -“Liar. The Pennsylvania Attorney General, a Democrat, found three cases of vote fraud in his state and is seeing that the culprits are prosecuted. It turned out that all three are Trump supporters.”

Don’t be so sure of yourself!
The WSJ lists a bunch of States that the Fraud possibly has occurred.
I’m just quoting Pa.:
“Pennsylvania
Sen. Josh Hawley (R., Mo.) and some other Republicans have questioned the validity of a 2019 state law called Act 77, which granted every Pennsylvania voter the option to request and cast a mail ballot, along with other changes. Pennsylvania’s GOP-controlled Legislature and Democratic governor backed the law.
Mr. Hawley has said the Pennsylvania Constitution requires all votes to be cast in person, with narrowly defined exceptions. Mr. Hawley also said that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court threw out a lawsuit by U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly (R., Pa.) without hearing the merits, which he said violated its own precedent, according to an email Mr. Hawley sent to other Republican senators that was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court unanimously dismissed Mr. Kelly’s lawsuit on Nov. 28. The court’s three-page opinion observed that the congressman waited more than a year after the mail-in ballot law was enacted—and after Mr. Biden had won—to file his claim. “Millions of Pennsylvania voters had already expressed their will in both the June 2020 Primary Election and the November 2020 General Election and the final ballots in the 2020 General Election were being tallied, with the results becoming seemingly apparent,” the court said. To grant Mr. Kelly’s claim now “would result in the disenfranchisement of millions of Pennsylvania voters,” the court said.
Mr. Kelly filed an emergency application asking the U.S. Supreme Court to block Pennsylvania from certifying the election results. The court denied that request on Dec. 8. Still pending is Mr. Kelly’s appeal of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision; the state has until Jan. 14 to file its response to the U.S. Supreme Court. Under normal procedures, Mr. Kelly would have 14 days to file a reply brief, after which the case would be scheduled for the court’s conference, the private meeting where the justices decide which cases to hear.”