Is the steal on in North Carolina?

Is that what these hurricanes were really all about?

Knock out the red states and introduce new voting laws just 30 days before the election that make it almost impossible to track or stop fraud?

That’s what some are saying.

Credit to my friend MJTruth who did an excellent job laying it all out:

There it is folks… Hurricane Helene was about cheating in the Election

🚨 The North Carolina Board of Elections Changed the Voting Rules in the Counties Affected by the Hurricane 10 Days before Early Voting Starts

🔴 RULE CHANGES
• Easier access to Absentee Ballots
• More time to apply for ballots
• Drop off ANYWHERE in the state
• “Assistance Teams” to help collect the fake ballots
• The county board will also hire “poll workers” from other counties and move them all around the state
—— nobody knows who these poll workers could be.

• This is a major red flag… if ‘Voters’ can drop off their ballots ANYWHERE in the state, how can anyone contest voter turnout in any county?
—— for example, if one county has 15,000 registered voters, we could now see a 30,000 voter turnout, and this could happen in any county in the entire state.

• In 2020, it took North Carolina 10 Days to certify the election. How long will it take this time?

First it was Covid… when they changed the rules. Now they’re using weather warfare…

Here is Fox News also covering the story:

Many are not happy with some going so far as to say “FRAUD INCOMING”:

Will this turn North Carolina blue?

Axios had more details on the changes:

Officials in North Carolina and Florida are racing against the clock to put in new voting procedures aimed at making it easier to cast ballots after the devastating storms that tore through the states.

Why it matters: The changes — which include modifying early voting days and increased flexibility with some voting locations — reflect the growing concerns about the storms’ impacts on the Nov. 5 election.

  • Together, the states account for 46 Electoral College votes in what’s expected to be a very close election. North Carolina, with 16 electoral votes, is among the seven swing states likely to decide who wins the White House.
  • “There is and should be real concern that if we don’t get this right, we’ll see really big dropoffs in turnout,” said Kevin Morris, a senior research fellow and voting policy scholar with the Brennan Center’s Democracy Program.

Unlike the 2020 election, when Republicans opposed pandemic-related changes such as expanded mail-in voting, both parties are encouraging new rules to help people vote.

  • One possible reason for the GOP’s change of heart: In North Carolina — a swing state that’s particularly key to former President Trump‘s pathway to victory — 8% of eligible voters are in counties impacted by Hurricane Helene.
  • Those include many voters in rural, Republican-leaning areas.

State of play: North Carolina’s elections board this week unanimously approved emergency measures for the 13 western counties hit hardest by Helene.

  • The changes include allowing county election boards to modify early voting days, hours and sites — and open a polling place in another county if their own polling site has been impacted.
  • Boards also may allow any voter in the county who is unable to get to their Election Day precinct voting site to cast a ballot at the county’s elections office.
  • North Carolina lawmakers on Wednesday also approved legislation to give $5 million to the State Board of Elections for post-storm administration costs — and expand the emergency rules to 25 counties.

The changes could help many North Carolinians vote, but voting isn’t likely to be top of mind for those with profound losses.

  • “If your basement is flooded, or if you are displaced and you have to go live with your grandma in another state … voting is going to drop down your list of priorities,” Morris said.

In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed an executive order after Helene that authorized election changes in the hardest-hit counties.

  • The order allows election supervisors to consolidate voting centers or relocate them to a different site if a polling place has been destroyed. It also eases some rules for mail-in ballots.

This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport.

View the original article here.

 

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