An election worker who handled the polls at a fourteen-day voting center in Maricopa County stated that at his polling station alone, over 500 voters were “disenfranchised.” Maricopa County’s election day was marred by printer mistakes, which resulted in long lineups and a huge number of provisional ballots. Multiple poll workers stated that many of these ballots were not counted due to inadequate training on checking voters out, while others just fled due to long lines. Despite various poll workers’ testimonies, Maricopa County election officials chose to certify the election.
“Ladies and gentlemen of the Board of Supervisors, I was a poll worker…. And what I will say that I’ve seen is voters this cycle have in fact been disenfranchised,” the poll worker said. “When they come in, and they bring their ballot, and they can’t turn it in because there’s a line to turn it in. Or they can’t vote, because they were told they cannot check in because they were not able to properly check out at the previous polling center they were at, because we, as poll workers, were not taught how to check out voters at our poll centers,” he added.
“So if a tabulator goes down and they have to come to our poll center, you know what this means. It means they are still checked in at another poll center and given provisional ballots that are not being counted.”
Due to the issues and long lines, only a fraction of the nearly 700 voters who had gathered outside his polling place were able to vote, according to the poll worker. If you think this was not intentional, then I have some wonderful miracle supplements I would love to sell you.
WATCH:
Maricopa Poll Worker CONFIRMS: Poll Workers WERE NOT trained properly, voters were 100% disenfranchised.
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL“Every single one of us who’s a poll worker right now is making fun of you” pic.twitter.com/HjXrWM50Bx
— Kari Lake (@KariLake) November 28, 2022
Long lines greeted Election Day voters in the state’s largest county due to what the Maricopa Board of Supervisors later termed as a “printer issue.”
Voters were told to return later in the day or submit a provisional ballot, which would be “taken downtown” and counted later. However, due to other engagements and time constraints, several voters chose to leave because of the long lines.
On Election Day, officials stated that approximately 20% of tabulators at county polling places were broken. According to the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, the “printer issue” affected around 17,000 ballots, which were finally counted.
This amount does not include voters who departed because of the problem, which, according to the 14-day center poll worker, affected over 500 votes at his polling location alone.
Despite the flaws, the board agreed to certify the election, with board chair Bill Gates offering a lengthy defense of their legitimacy.
This entire thing stinks on ice.





















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