Secretary of State Raffensperger, his CFO Sterling, and his Deputy Secretary of State Fuchs have all been connected to a firm that helps Georgia Democrats run as Republicans.
Georgia Record, according to a report, uncovered more than a few ties between top Republicans and the firm that grooms Democrats to run for Republican jobs.
Landmark Communications of Atlanta touts itself as the go-to place for GOP candidates who want to be elected in Georgia, according to founder and president Mark Roundtree.
However, the firm has a history of working with Democrats who get elected as Republicans, with some candidates having ties to the Communist Chinese Party (CCP).
It explains why newly elected Republicans suddenly start voting for Democrat proposals.
PENCE HAD CONSTITUTIONAL OBLIGATION TO STOP RIGGED ELECTION
Former President Trump has released a statement pointing out that his VP Mike Pence had every right to not certify the 2020 Election results, stating the Constitution allowed for such action.
NBC news reported on January 5, 2021 that Trump was false in his claims that Pence could “stop the steal.”
President Donald Trump claimed Tuesday that Vice President Mike Pence could single-handedly reject certain electors during Congress’ Electoral College certification process, turning up the pressure on him to help overturn the results of the election.
“The Vice President has the power to reject fraudulently chosen electors,” Trump tweeted…
…This is false.
WATCH: Mike “Judas” Pence Receives STRANGE COIN After BACKSTABBING Trump on Jan. 6
Pence, in his role as president of the Senate, is scheduled to preside over Congress’ certification of the results Wednesday, as detailed by the 12th Amendment. But he can’t intervene in the process.
The law governing the certification process, the Electoral Count Act of 1887, specifically limits the power of the president of the Senate precisely because a president of the Senate had intervened in the count previously. In 1857, after James Buchanan’s win, the Senate president overruled an objection against Wisconsin electors who had been delayed in their certification process by a snowstorm in 1856.
“One of the points of the Electoral Count Act is to constrain the vice president given this earlier episode and make it clear that he’s a presider, not a decider,” said former Federal Election Commission Chairman Trevor Potter, president of the Campaign Legal Center.
President Trump pointed out that Pence had every right to stop the certification. The evidence, he said, was that the current Senate is trying to pass legislation, preventing a Vice President from doing this in the future.
NOEM GETS THE AWARD, BUT DOESN’T DESERVE IT
During the pandemic in 2020, South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem declared “South Dakota is open for business” and claimed that South Dakota never shut down for covid but her record tells a different story.
The American Legislative Exchange Council just gave Kristi Noem an award for being, at least what they think, the “best” Governor in the country.
Although Governor Noem repeated time and time again that she would never shut down her state, in reality she did just that.
Christopher Vondracek, from the South Dakota Mitchell Republic said, “A common theme in Gov. Noem’s speeches to national audiences has been that the state remained open for business. But a flurry of executive orders, particularly over six weeks in March and April of 2020 in the pandemic’s beginning, tell a very different story.”
Noem actually issued well over 30 executive orders, to shut down business in South Dakota.
As reported by Vondracek:
On April 6, 2020, with confirmed cases still low but officials planning for 5,000 beds and 1,300 ventilators, Noem’s team dispatched an executive order that said the governor ordered that residents 65 and older or who had an underlying health condition in two of the state’s largest counties, Minnehaha and Lincoln, which encompass Sioux Falls, “shall stay at home or a place of residence” unless working in “critical infrastructure” or conducting “essential errands.”
That same day, Noem said in a press conference, “we’re changing the ‘shoulds’ to ‘shalls’” in her executive order, meaning she was mandating compliance, just like Democrat governors who were locking down across the country.
This early April remain-in-place order wasn’t the only directive Noem gave the state’s residents. Throughout multiple executive orders, even as far back as March 23, the governor also delineated between “essential” and non-essential jobs, activities, and businesses in the orders from the state capitol.
On March 13, 2020, three days after the first known positive case was confirmed in the state, Noem ordered “non-essential” public employees to work from home.
Ten days later, an order from the governor’s office on the second floor of the Statehouse told South Dakotans to assist personnel in “essential” jobs, such as first responders.
Moreover, that same March 23 executive order told “any enclosed retail business that promotes public gatherings” — which the order defined as everything from bars to health clubs — to suspend or modify their business practices.
Even as late as April 24, Noem issued an order reemphasizing a previous order that urged “all South Dakotans” who were “particularly vulnerable to COVID-19” to stay home.
The Noem Executive Order issued April 6, 2020 was “mandatory” for two major counties representing a third of the state population, requiring that anyone over 65 and anyone who is a “vulnerable” individual “shall stay at home” and “shall wash hands often.”
Noem granted the Secretary of Health authority over all other agencies in order to “stop the spread.”
The South Dakota State House of Representatives rejected the proposed House Bill 1297 in a vote 50-17, but Noem moved around it by executive order.
ANOTHER RINO AT WORK
Republican Missouri Lieutenant Governor Mike Kehoe, is allegedly behind efforts to change Missouri’s Congressional map that will give Democrats the edge with an extra one or two seats.
RINOs are trying to push through redistricting as soon as they can to help their Democrat buddies.