I know this is too long too read, but if interested, read on….I am trying to conceive what possible way they might try to cheat and could it be via the ‘popular vote’?
I know your first thought is to say …impossible….there is no way for them to try stealing election by using the popular vote instead of the electoral count, but just consider that they could be thinking of it…
Facts
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Tens of millions of illegal aliens…intentionally
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Ds votes do not want to ban illegal aliens from voting in our national elections because they voted against the bill this week.
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Illegal aliens are already allowed to register to vote in some states, i.e. California, New York, etc
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Ds presidential candidates have won the popular vote before but lost the election….think Hillary Clinton
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Ds like Hillary think we should use the popular vote to determine president
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There is an organization whose goal it is to make this happen. It’s called Common Cause…and below are some info off their website which is more evidence the might try it.
Common Cause
https://www.commoncause.org/our-work/voting-and-elections/national-popular-vote/national-popular-vote-faq/#
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Under the National Popular Vote plan, the compact would take effect only when enabling legislation has been enacted by states collectively possessing a majority of the electoral votes: 270 of 538 total.
Once effective, states could withdraw from the compact at any time except during the six-month window between July 20 of an election year and Inauguration Day (January 20).
How many states are currently signed on?
As of now, 17 states and Washington, D.C. have joined the National Popular Vote compact: Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Maryland, Washington, New Jersey, Illinois, New York, California, Colorado, New Mexico, Delaware, Maine and Oregon. This brings us to 209 of the 270 (73%) electoral votes needed to activate the pact — just 65 votes away.
States with D governors not signed on yet:
Arizona
Kentucky
Is it constitutional?
Yes. The selection of presidential electors is specifically entrusted to the states by the Constitution. As with other powers entrusted to the states, it is an application, not a circumvention, of the Constitution when the states utilize those powers as they see fit. The framers enacted the provisions relating to the Electoral College to allow for state innovation. In contrast, other issues related to the federal government are not exclusively entrusted to the states, and therefore the states lack the power to alter them.