Hundreds of Millions of Dollars Spent on Dominion Voting Machines in Numerous Swing States Before 2020 Election

Hundreds of Millions of Dollars Spent on Dominion Voting
Machines in Numerous Swing States Before 2020 Election 1

The purchase and implementation of Dominion voting machines
in swing states around the country was likely planned over a period
of years.�
These same machines are at the center
of the fraud filings in Michigan and Georgia last night by attorney
Sidney Powell. 

The current results of the 2020 Presidential election in
many states were fraudulent due in large part to the use of
Dominion voting machines.

Georgia

Georgia
spent over $100 million on Dominion
voting machines.  The
machines that can be easily manipulated to steal elections:

Georgia officials awarded a contract for 30,000 new voting
machines to Dominion Voting on Monday, scrapping the state’s
17-year-old electronic voting equipment and replacing it with
touchscreens that print out paper ballots.

The $107 million contract will switch Georgia from its
longtime elections company
, Election Systems & Software,
following complaints about malfunctioning
machines
 and unverifiable
results
during the November midterm election.â€

Michigan

In Michigan $30 million of federal funds was reportedly spent on
voting machines.  This was announced in August of 2018 but the
related article has now been taken down.

New voting machines set for use in upcoming primary
Published by admin on Thu, 08/02/2018 – 3:00am
By:
Linda Gallagher, Contributing Writer


https://antrimreview.net/content/new-voting-machines-set-use-upcoming-primary

“New voting machines, being introduced to voters in both
Antrim and Kalkaska counties next week during the primary election,
will feature digital touch screens and improved tabulation,
according to the Michigan Secretary of State’s Office, which
spent $30 million in federal funds to upgrade all of the voting
equipment in Michigan’s 83 counties by November’s general
election.â€

Pennsylvania

By February 2019 in Pennsylvania,
Governor Wolf’s actions to replace voting machine
s in the
state were well under way:

Gov. Tom Wolf has requested $75 million in state funding over
the next five years to help counties comply with his directive to
replace voting machines, but it is the mandate itself that
continues to trouble some state lawmakers.

Republicans questioned Wolf’s directive:

Why the need? Why the rush? How to pay for them? Those were
among the questions lawmakers posed to Acting Commonwealth
Secretary Kathy Boockvar at a Senate budget hearing for the
Department of State on Wednesday.

Later in
May 2018 new voting machines
were introduced in the state:

Voter concerns and election security are on county officials’
minds as they try to save as much money as they can while complying
with a state mandate to upgrade their voting machines.

For contractors, there could be more than $100 million in
contracts at stake.

In April of last year, the Department of State told counties
that they
should pick new voting systems with a voter-verifiable paper record
by the end of 2019.

The administration of Gov. Tom Wolf committed
to having new machines in place by 2020
after settling
a lawsuit
brought by 2016 Green Party presidential candidate
Jill Stein. The case targeted Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin
for their voting systems’ susceptibility to hacking and for
barriers to recounts.

Then in August in Pennsylvania, the corrupt Democrat
Governor Wolf issued bonds
to pay for voting machines that
could easily be manipulated:

Gov. Tom Wolf said Tuesday he is ordering a bond issue to help
Pennsylvania’s counties pay for new voting machines ahead of
2020′s presidential election after a dispute between the Democrat
and the Republican-controlled Legislature doomed legislation to
help fund the machines.

The bond issue of up to $90 million is designed to reimburse
each county for 60% of their cost, Wolf said in a statement. He
gave no timeline to get the money to counties, which applauded the
decision.

Arizona

In
June 2019 Maricopa County
announced approving millions for
Dominion voting machines:

Maricopa County voters
faced problems at polling sites
in the August 2018 primary
election, from counting malfunctions to dozens of sites being
closed for several hours on Election Day.

The board approved the $6.1 million contract over three years
with Dominion Voting Systems and set aside money for tabulation
equipment.

The board, working on the recommendations of a work group it
appointed to recommend election reforms, also unanimously approved
a new executive director of elections, Scott Jarrett, who will
report to the board and the County Recorder’s Office, which
oversees elections.

County Recorder Adrian Fontes, who had blamed the primary
difficulties on county contractors hired to prepare the voting
equipment, could not be reached for comment.

Nevada

In Nevada
$15 million was spent on Dominion systems
covering all counties
throughout the state before the 2018 election.

Hundreds of millions of dollars were spent across the
country to implement voting machines that could easily be
manipulated to change the winner of elections. 

And they were used to manipulate US elections.

The post
Hundreds of Millions of Dollars Spent on Dominion Voting Machines
in Numerous Swing States Before 2020 Election
appeared first on
The Gateway
Pundit
.

Read the Full Article

Georgia Lawsuit: Witness Testifies About Use of Different Paper For ‘Counterfeit’ Ballots, ‘Watermark Solid Grey Instead of Transparent’ – 100% For Joe Biden
California is now reportedly using firefighters to enforce pandemic restrictions for businesses

You might also like
Menu