Five Key Takeaways from Arizona's Legislature Using Plenary Power to Reform Elections
Topic: Elections
Ple-na-ry
Definition: unqualified; absolute
If you’ve read this journal for more than a hot minute, you certainly realize by now that I am no fan of “crying wolf,” or passing out ill-advised theories that don’t hold water when they are challenged. For instance, I have never been on board with the theory that the major mechanism of election fraud in 2020 was for Trump votes to be converted by the machines, themselves just glass and plastic, to Biden votes. Why? Because Trump had 74 million votes in the 2020 election, 11 million more than he had four years prior. It only makes sense to me that Biden is the one receiving counterfeit votes.
I believe electronic manipulation of election results takes place in many forms, and since electronic voting renders our elections practically not auditable, our elections are not transparent. Those casting a vote in-person on a voting machine are throwing a vote into a black box, which is transported by thumb drive to a central count station, if indeed those votes make it there at all (they may not if they are known to come from a massive Republican stronghold in the middle of a close race).
On March 8, just two weeks after presenting election testimony before the Arizona Senate, I advised patriots to research the plenary power of the Arizona legislature, particularly regarding elections.
On March 30, the Arizona Senate passed Concurrent Resolution 1037, and the legislature transmitted this resolution to the Secretary of State four days later. This resolution was passed because the fraudulent Governor of Arizona, Katie Hobbs, vetoed Senate Bill 1074, which purposed to achieve the same goals as C.R. 1037 – namely to protect critical infrastructure, which includes elections infrastructure, as specified by U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson on January 17, 2017, just three days before President Trump took office.
Today, Arizona Senate Majority Leader and Marine Corps veteran Sonny Borrelli informed all 15 Arizona County Boards of Supervisors that they are not authorized to use voting machines in the upcoming 2024 Presidential Election. Borrelli’s news release contained this commentary:
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