Dems plot mass migration to Georgia to take advantage of runoff election
Two senate races in Georgia are likely headed for run-off elections on January 5 because so far none of the candidates received above 50 percent of the vote.
Ari Hoffman Seattle, WA
November 7, 2020 2:00 PM
As the fate of control of the Senate is still in doubt, two senate races in Georgia are likely headed for run-off elections on Jan. 5, because so far none of the candidates received above 50 percent of the vote.
Democrats will likely need to win both of them to retake the majority for the first time since 2014. However, what appears to be a major loophole for potential voter fraud has created a strong likelihood that the balance of power in the US Senate will be decided not by current Georgia residents but by many new voters not in Georgia today.
Some Liberals, including journalists, are encouraging Democrats to move to red states like Georgia with the sole purpose of impacting future elections even suggesting that Michael Bloomberg should foot the bill.By Georgia law, if no Senator passes a 50 percent threshold, a runoff election is held. As of the time of publishing, it looks as if neither Senator will cross that line. A Jan. 5, 2021 election will likely decide not just one, but two Senate seats. If they both go Democrat, it will be leader Schumer, with Vice President Kamala Harris, breaking any 50-50 tie. If they are split or both go Republican, its Leader McConnell.
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https://amp.thepostmillennial.com/georgia-runoffs-leave-room-for-election-tampering/4 mins reading