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Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Amistad Project & Special Counsel Report Expose Ballot Fraud in Wisc. Nursing Homes

'He alleged that "helping" often meant coercing residents into voting for certain candidates... '

(Joshua Paladino, Headline USA) The Wisconsin special counsel investigating voter fraud and irregularities in the state’s 2020 presidential contest found that voter turnout at 91 nursing homes in four urban, Democrat counties averaged 95 to 100 percent.

The five counties—Milwaukee, Racine, Dane, Kenosha, and Brown—are all centered around Green Bay, Milwaukee, and Madison—the three major cities in which Democrats need huge majorities to win the state as a whole, Just the News reported.

The 95 to 100 percent turnout rates in these nursing homes stood out. In 2020, only 67 percent of the eligible population voted.

Retired Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman compiled the report at the State Assembly’s request.

Gableman said that the special counsel has not examined every nursing home in these counties, but the 91 nursing homes represent what the special counsel “has been able to vet to this juncture.”

“There are more facilities in these counties, and after auditing the votes from other facilities, the above percentages may change,” he wrote.

Thirty nursing homes in Milwaukee County, 12 in Racine, and 24 in Dane all reported 100 percent turnout rates. All 1084 residents at the Milwaukee nursing homes reportedly cast their vote, while all 348 and 723 cast their vote in Racine and Dane, respectively.

Kenosha’s 9 nursing homes posted a 97 percent turnout rate, and Brown’s 16 nursing homes a 95 percent participation rate.

Gableman’s report also implicated former President Barack Obama‘s campaign manager, David Plouffe, in the Democratic Party’s election fraud operation in Wisconsin.

The Racine County Sheriff conducted his own investigation into voter fraud at nursing homes last year, and he requested that the state attorney general open a broader investigation, the Republic Brief reported.

The sheriff said that the Wisconsin Election Commission violated state law by bringing “enough ballots to each residential care facility to vote” and using employees to “assist the voters with the voting process.”

He alleged that “helping” often meant coercing residents into voting for certain candidates.

The Amistad Project confirmed the investigation by speaking with residents’ families, who often stated that their family members could not vote.

“It’s quite remarkable: There’s private money that flows in, government-hired voter navigators go after nursing homes, and suddenly, 90-some-odd nursing homes in Wisconsin have 100% turnout, even if people — who, unfortunately, due to their health conditions — are unable to read, think, or contemplate voting,” said Phillip Kline, director of the Amistad Project.

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