representative, a republican, who had to go to court to force the secretary of state s office and his county to redo his election because they messed it up. what do you think this secretary of state did and the state by extension and also on its own what do you think that georgia did that made your election unfair? i would say that they made the elections overall unfair, and i want to be very clear. this isn t simply about my election. my election is part of a larger pattern of behavior, and that s why this is so important because republicans were harmed. democrats were harmed. independents were harmed. but most importantly, georgians were harmed. we had 4 1/2-hour lines because of the disinvestment in machinery. we had machines that were flipping names because of the antiquated nature of our machines. we had people who were purged from the rolls unlawfully, including a 92-year-old woman who had voted in the same community since 1968 because she was a civil rights leader. we had
secretary of state that purposefully whoa, whoa, whoa. chelsea clinton was not a senior white house adviser. was investigated by the fbi and congress deleted thousands purpleful thousands chelsea clinton was first daughter. she was not a senior white house adviser. she was not flying around the world as an official. that s the point. a representative of the president. one of the things i ve always wanted to do i m going to let you in on a secret. you ever watch around the horn on espn? i have always wanted to do segments when we re talking about this kind of stuff, not life or death, not like whether you go to war or not, i always wanted to score debates because, you know, there s a competitiveness to it. sometimes they give a point, take a point away. niger is laughing at me. i m taking a point away. but niger has the upper hand when it comes to the deletions and, you know, why was it del e deleted and the level of transparency. that is a vulnerability in the