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The speaker discusses real-time election data from SIDL in multiple states, highlighting oscillations and deletions in vote counts. They question the accuracy of projections and media calls, emphasizing the need for transparency and accountability in the election process. The speaker also mentions legal challenges and concerns about the media influencing election outcomes.

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Donald Trump is just 4 electoral votes shy of the 270 needed to win the presidency. Currently, Alaska shows Trump leading by nearly 15 points with 56% reporting, which would give him 3 electoral votes. Additionally, he is favored to win Maine's 2nd congressional district, potentially reaching the crucial 270. Key states like Michigan and Wisconsin are also leaning towards Trump, with significant leads reported. In Michigan, Trump is ahead by 324,000 votes with 83% reporting, and in Wisconsin, he leads by 108,000 votes with 96% reporting. Other battleground states, including Arizona and Nevada, show Trump with favorable margins. Despite the outstanding calls, all indicators suggest a Trump victory is imminent.

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Sit back as we discuss the swing states and their impact. Carlo, let's open the door to your perspective. We all know the significance of these key areas.

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The speaker discusses the importance of three key states in the US election: Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. These states had a combined total of 46 electoral votes and played a crucial role in determining the outcome of the election. In Wisconsin, the margin was around 23,000 votes, and candidates could request a recount. Michigan had a smaller margin of about 11,000 votes, and candidates could pay a fee to request a recount in specific precincts. Pennsylvania had a larger margin of 44,000 votes, but the state predominantly used paperless voting machines, making the recount process more complicated. In Pennsylvania, three citizens from each precinct wanting a recount had to post a bond and swear to fraud.

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The speaker claims that real-time Edison data reveals election data manipulation. According to the speaker, Seidl receives raw election data directly from election officials in at least nine states. The speaker alleges that an additive process should show more votes, not deletions, in each interval report. However, a video of Edison reports allegedly shows pauses, oscillation, and deletions in total, in-person, and mail-in votes. The speaker claims this is the algorithm trying to figure out the math problem. The speaker points to North Carolina and Georgia counties as examples, noting Seidl directly contracts with Georgia. The speaker then plays a clip of someone discussing estimated vote percentages dropping, suggesting the reported results are not actual results. The speaker questions the calling of races with razor-thin margins, particularly Arizona, based on projections and alleged impossible data anomalies. The speaker asserts that historically, those counting votes called races, but now machines and news outlets do, deterring challenges.

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Kamala Harris is unlikely to win key battleground states like Georgia, North Carolina, and Arizona. If she doesn't secure these, she must win Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin to reach 270 electoral votes. Current insights suggest she could win Pennsylvania but still lose the presidency if she fails in Wisconsin, where sources indicate she faces significant challenges. The narrative that winning Pennsylvania guarantees the election is misleading; she could win there and still lose overall due to Wisconsin. Recent polling shows a tight race in Pennsylvania, with Harris within the margin of error. Attention should be focused on Wisconsin, as its outcome may be crucial for the election.

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We are awaiting more votes from the key battleground states of Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Both campaigns are closely monitoring the situation as six top battlegrounds remain undecided. Stay tuned for the next significant update on the vote count.

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President Trump is leading in a morning consult poll in seven swing states: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. The poll shows that he is ahead of President Biden in all of these areas.

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This is a crucial moment for the Harris campaign to reach 270 electoral votes. They are focusing on the blue wall states: Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan, where they have the best chances. Currently, two of these states are leaning red. The campaign remains hopeful but is also considering possibilities in the Sun Belt. In North Carolina, Trump leads by 142,000 votes with 85% reporting. While there are still outstanding votes in urban areas that could favor Democrats, the situation resembles 2016 more than 2020. The Harris campaign is analyzing the remaining votes to strategize, but the outlook in North Carolina appears more favorable for Trump at this stage.

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The discussion centers on the 2020 election, which Speaker 1 claims was rigged due to fake ballots and other factors, including the influence of 51 intelligence agents. Speaker 0 counters that recounts in swing states and over 50 lawsuits found no widespread corruption or voter fraud, citing a potential case of voter fraud in six battleground states that uncovered fewer than 475 cases. Speaker 1 asserts Wisconsin has practically admitted the election was rigged and other states are doing the same. Speaker 0 questions how Speaker 1 will appeal to independent suburban women voters. Speaker 1 references polls showing him leading, including with women. Speaker 0 notes polls can change. Speaker 1 states he would like to be less combative but feels the press's dishonesty necessitates it to get his message across and win.

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The majority of election jurisdictions in the US use outdated software that is vulnerable to hacking. States like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, Florida, Iowa, Indiana, Arizona, North Carolina, and even Georgia (despite recent legislation) are at risk. If a small percentage determines the election outcome and people perceive it as unfair, it could seriously damage our democratic system. Experts argue that without a thorough forensic analysis, it is impossible to confirm that no votes were altered in the 2016 election. Additionally, 43% of American voters use machines with security flaws, and some companies refuse to disclose their cybersecurity practices. Five states lack a paper trail, making it impossible to verify the accuracy of voting machine results.

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Sit back as we discuss the swing states and their impact. Carlo, let's open the door to your insights on this topic. We all understand the significance of these key areas.

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Between 9:11 PM and 9:32 PM on CNN, there were significant vote swings during the election. Joe Biden's votes dropped from 706,000 to 517,000, then increased to 871,000 and dropped again to 495,000. Meanwhile, Trump's votes went from 371,000 to 413,000 and then down to 292,000. The speaker questions how votes can decrease when they should only be added. They highlight the possibility of errors, mentioning a 19,000 vote switch in Pennsylvania and questioning the number of errors nationwide and who is accountable for them.

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Michigan shows a significant shift, with Donald Trump gaining ground compared to 2020. If Kamala Harris wins Pennsylvania, she would reach 219 electoral votes, needing more states to secure a win. Virginia and Minnesota are expected to lean Democratic, while North Carolina, Georgia, and Arizona remain critical battlegrounds. The presidential race is tight, which could influence Senate outcomes. Currently, Republicans have a net gain of one seat, but many races are still undecided. The focus remains on the balance of power in both the Senate and House of Representatives as results continue to come in.

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It always takes a long time to count ballots, but in previous elections, large margins allowed for earlier calls. Margins are likely to be tight this time, so we might need to wait a few days in states like Georgia. Each state has different rules for counting, which can make the results look suspicious. The count doesn't unfold in a uniform manner; sometimes results come in batches. We run the most complicated elections in the world.

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Governor, the race is expected to be drawn out, with the outcome hinging on the expectations game. Even if Donald Trump wins the state but by a small margin, he is unlikely to follow Lyndon Johnson's example and withdraw. Trump is solely motivated by self-interest and will stay in the race as long as there is an interest for him. However, Trump's challenge arises if the other candidates unite and make it a one-on-one competition.

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Trump is in a competitive position for the popular vote, with recent polls showing a tight race against Harris. Current polling indicates Trump is ahead in some surveys, while Harris leads in others, making the national popular vote too close to call. Historically, Republicans haven't won the popular vote since 2004, and the last two elections showed Democrats with significant leads at this point. However, Trump’s potential to win the popular vote raises the possibility of a Democrat winning the electoral college despite losing the popular vote. State-level polling reveals Trump is performing well in key states, which could lead to a scenario where he gains in the national popular vote but loses in the electoral college. This situation could reignite discussions about electoral college reform.

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President Trump is leading in a morning consult poll across seven swing states: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. This poll shows that he is ahead of President Biden in all of these areas.

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The math is concerning for Democrats, as they are down 1.7 million early votes in battleground states. In urban areas, they are short by 1.4 million votes among women voters, while rural voters have exceeded expectations by 300,000. Democrats need to secure early victories, as Republicans typically perform better on election day. Currently, the margins do not favor Democrats in these key states.

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In a recent CNN poll, it was revealed that Donald Trump is leading in the battleground states of Georgia and Michigan. In Georgia, where Biden won by a narrow margin in 2020, Trump is preferred by 5% of registered voters. In Michigan, which Trump won in 2016 but Biden won in 2020, Trump is now ahead by 10 points. Interestingly, a significant portion of those polled in each state did not vote in 2020, and these less engaged voters heavily favored Trump, with a 26-point lead in Georgia and a 40-point lead in Michigan.

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The speaker discusses how the vote total may have been altered through the HAMMER program and ScoreCard software, affecting the election outcome. They mention a computer glitch in Michigan that favored President Trump, suggesting similar issues in other states. They question the sudden appearance of thousands of ballots for Biden, deeming it statistically improbable.

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Pollsters show Trump down 4-5 points, but Rasmussen and Mark Pence polls show him almost even. The New York Times poll, showing Trump further down, surveyed only 37% Trump voters, despite him winning by almost 1.5 points. The Washington Post polled over 2,000 people, but only 840 were identified as Trump voters. This echoes 2016 when polls were wrong, and 2020 when Biden's strength was overestimated by 4-5 points. In 2024, an NPR poll had Kamala Harris winning by four points on election eve. The Des Moines Register had Trump losing Iowa by three points, but he won by 12. Pollsters may be trying to create momentum, fundraise, and energize opposition, despite Trump losing support due to trade war controversies.

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Speaker 0 asks Speaker 1 why they are behind Trump in swing state polls. Speaker 1 responds by saying that the polls are not accurate because there are 10 polls in total, and in 8 of them, they are actually ahead of Trump in those states. Speaker 1 suggests checking all the polls instead of just relying on CNN and New York Times. They emphasize not to believe the negative portrayal and encourage reviewing the actual poll data.

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Speaker 0 presents a video focused on data and evidence of alleged irregularities in the 2020 election, asserting that there has been no comprehensive place to see widespread fraud until now. He states the video is “pure data” and invites viewers to consider the statistical anomalies in three states (Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia) in the early hours of 11/04/2020, when Biden received major vote spikes after trailing Trump. - He analyzes 8,954 individual vote updates and identifies a clear statistical pattern across nearly all updates, with four notably aberrant updates: two in Michigan, one in Wisconsin, and one in Georgia, all occurring in the same five-hour window in the middle of the night when counting reportedly stopped in some places. - In Michigan, a 06:30AM update shows Biden at 141,258 votes to Trump’s 5,968, described as the most extreme update in all datasets across all states, followed by a noticeable ratio change in nearby updates. In Wisconsin, a single update allegedly moved Biden from trailing by over 100,000 votes into the lead. In Georgia, a 01:34AM Eastern Time update shows Biden at 136,155 to Trump’s 29,115. They claim these four spikes exceed the states’ margins of victory, making the spikes not only abnormal by percentage but also by magnitude. They conclude that if these four unlikely updates had not happened, the presidency could have been different. - Detractors are cited as arguing human error, but the video questions where evidence of corrections is, and notes that California shows only one anomalous update in percentage, not enough magnitude to shift outcomes. - A “consistently identical ratio of Biden to Trump votes across time” is highlighted as allegedly impossible, with a Florida example showing 100 identical ratios over several days. The video asserts a computer algorithm is involved, termed a weighted race distribution, associated with Diebold voting machines (known as early as 2001), implying values rather than simple counts. - In California, a single update is shown with Biden receiving about 65% and Trump 32% for one vote, raising questions about how one vote could go to more than one candidate. Speaker 0 then links these patterns to alleged connections between Diebold and Dominion Voting Systems, claiming Dominion acquired ESNS in 2010, which had previously acquired Diebold, and that Dominion’s software is licensed from Smartmatic. They also note that forensic audits show errors and that the mainstream narrative claims these issues are misinformation. They reference NBC News and PBS findings on how easy it is to hack voting machines or cast fake votes. Next, Speaker 0 notes eyewitness and video evidence from Georgia: poll worker Ruby allegedly was filmed in the backroom with absentee ballots, and at 10:30PM on November 3, media and poll watchers were told to leave, yet Ruby and others remained, pulling ballots from under a table and distributing them to counting stations. They describe Ruby running the same stack of ballots to the machine three times, observing a large Biden surge after 01:34AM Georgia time, and question whether a ballot can be counted more than once, citing Coffey County, Georgia as an example of someone claiming to scan the same batches repeatedly. Speaker 0 references Raquel Rodriguez, arrested for election fraud in Texas over video evidence of ballot harvesting, and asserts that cybersecurity evidence indicates Dominion and Edison Research used an unencrypted VPN with easily accessible credentials allowing foreign access, asserting that China, Iran, and other countries accessed the servers, contradicting claims that Dominion machines were not connected to the Internet. They mention Dominion’s association with a Chinese-registered domain, and board members with Chinese nationality, alleging conflicts of interest through corporate ownership and licensing from Smartmatic. Speaker 0 highlights that Antrim County, Michigan audits found high error and adjudication rates in Dominion, with an 68 o 5% error rate far above federal guidelines, missing logs for 2020, and reprogramming of election event designer cards during the safe harbor period. They point to subpoenas and the lack of access to logs, and to affidavits from poll workers claiming illegal activities, non-equal treatment of observers, counting without proper oversight, shredding ballots, and other irregularities. Speaker 7 concludes with a claim that many Americans distrust the 2020 election and urges viewers to download and share the video, demand election reform, and notes that the video’s credits will continue with data readers, while warning of erasure or fact checks by tech platforms.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Trump's Garbage Truck Moment, and Biden Biting Babies, w/ Stu Burguiere, RedSteeze, Spencer Kimball
Guests: Stu Burguiere, RedSteeze, Spencer Kimball
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Megyn Kelly opens the Halloween episode of her show by discussing her Halloween candy-giving traditions and the importance of manners. She mentions the upcoming live coverage of the election night on Sirius XM and YouTube, highlighting a diverse lineup of guests to analyze the results. Spencer Kimball from Emerson polling joins to discuss recent polls, particularly a CNN poll showing Kamala Harris with a lead in Michigan and Wisconsin. Kimball explains that polls are ranges and emphasizes that the CNN poll may be an outlier, suggesting that Harris is underperforming compared to Biden in 2020. He notes that Trump appears to be gaining momentum as election day approaches, particularly in key states like Pennsylvania, where polls show a tight race. The conversation shifts to the potential paths to victory for both candidates. Kimball analyzes states like Georgia, North Carolina, and Arizona, indicating that Trump has a solid chance in these areas. He mentions that North Carolina is historically challenging for Democrats and discusses the implications of Harris pulling advertising from the state. In Arizona, Kimball points out that immigration is a significant issue, with both genders leaning towards Trump, which is unusual compared to other swing states. He also discusses Nevada, where early voting numbers show a surprising Republican turnout, suggesting that Trump could have a better chance than expected. The discussion continues with a focus on the Rust Belt states, particularly Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. Kimball believes Wisconsin is the most favorable for Trump, while Michigan remains a toss-up. He highlights that Harris is struggling with minority groups and older voters compared to Biden's performance in 2020. As the show progresses, the hosts analyze Trump's campaign strategies, including his recent antics, which they believe resonate well with voters. They contrast this with Harris's inability to connect with the electorate, emphasizing the importance of authenticity in campaigning. The episode concludes with a humorous segment about Biden's odd behavior at a recent event, where he pretended to eat a baby's foot, prompting discussions about the appropriateness of such actions for a sitting president. The hosts express concern over Biden's mental acuity and how it may impact the election.
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