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The senate committee on homeland security and governmental affairs will hold an oversight hearing on voting irregularities because Americans don t think this was a legitimate election, a report says.
According to The Gateway Pundit, the hearing is meant to examine the election irregularities raised and investigated on by President Donald Trump and his legal team in swing states including Pennsylvania.
The hearing is said to be scheduled on Wednesday, December 16, at 10AM ET with a host of witnesses including former Whitewater controversy solicitor general Ken Starr.
Other witnesses scheduled for the hearing include U.S. Election Assistance Commission Commissioner Donald Palmer, Attorney James Troupis, Pennsylvania Representative Francis Ryan, Attorney Jessie Binnall, and former Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Director Christopher Krebs.
Goal: Formally concede the 2020 Presidential Election.
President Donald Trump’s refusal to concede the 2020 US Presidential Election and acknowledge former Vice President Joseph Biden as President-Elect is a threat to democracy and potential danger. The Electoral College officially named Biden the winner of the 2020 election and all 50 states have certified their election results. The Trump campaign filed multiple lawsuits and even attempted to have electors removed in crucial battleground states. All of these attempts to change the outcome of the election have been rejected by the Supreme Court.
Trump maintains that the election was insecure and refuses to concede or acknowledge Biden as President-Elect. His failure to do so has resulted in civil unrest and, in extreme cases, violence. At rallies held in Washington DC in support of Trump, people were stabbed and shot. Additionally, high-ranking politicians have condoned violence as a means of supporting Trump. University College
Mooney (left) with President Trump
CHARLESTON – Two of West Virginia’s three U.S. representatives have signed a brief supporting a lawsuit challenging election results in four swing states.
Republicans Alex Mooney and Carol Miller signed the amicus brief in the U.S. Supreme Court case filed by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey signed another amicus, or friend of the court, brief with other Republican AGs as well.
Mooney and Miller are two of the 106 House of Representatives members who signed the latest brief, which was filed December 10. Miller
“This brief amicus curiae presents the concern of amici as Members of Congress, shared by untold millions of their constituents, that the unconstitutional irregularities involved in the 2020 presidential election cast doubt upon its outcome and the integrity of the American system of elections,” the filing states. “On the merits, this amicus br