#1531 – ‘The president wants justice’: Kayleigh McEnany says Trump campaign has 240 pages of sworn affidavits proving voter fraud

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said the Trump campaign has evidence proving voting improprieties in the 2020 election.

McEnany held up what she said were 234 pages of sworn affidavits alleging voting irregularities that could sway the presidential election in President Trump’s favor Tuesday on Hannity.

“We keep hearing the drumbeat of ‘Where’s the evidence?’ Right here, Sean,” McEnany said while fanning the stack of paper.

“Two-hundred, thirty-four pages of sworn affidavits. These are real people, real allegations, signed with notaries, who are alleging the following, among other contentions,” she added. “They are alleging — this is one county, Wayne County, Michigan — they are saying that there was a batch of ballots where 60% had the same signature, they’re saying that 35 ballots had no voter record, but they were counted anyway, that 50 ballots were run multiple times through a tabulation machine, that one woman said her son was deceased but nevertheless somehow voted.”

On Saturday, major news networks called the race for Democratic nominee Joe Biden, who eclipsed the 270 Electoral College votes needed to claim victory. But the Trump campaign has alleged fraud in several key battleground states, including Pennsylvania and Michigan, both of which onboarded mail-in balloting at a time when the coronavirus pandemic made voting in person impossible for some people.

McEnany said Trump has no intention to concede the race even though calls have been made for him to congratulate Biden.

“The president wants justice for the 70 million-plus forgotten men and women in this country who showed up to vote for him, who deserve to have their allegations heard by a court of law,” McEnany said. “You had 687,000 ballots without poll watchers who were able to observe, they were a football field away from observing. To your point, Sean, our constitution is crystal clear that legislators determine the time, manner, and place of an election.”

Translate »