Dem Ariz. Sec. of State Rejects 'Analysis' of Voting Data, Says 'There is No Current Controversy'

Nick Kangadis | November 12, 2020
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There are two courts of opinion while the 2020 election slowly trudges on. One side believes that the race is over and that their candidate has already won because the media said so, and the other believes that nefarious actions may have been taken in order to get the other side's candidate in office. Either way, average people are left twisting in the wind without very many 100 percent accurate stories coming out of this election.

Who knows what to believe anymore when the politicians take a left or right position instead of a right or wrong position?

Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs (D) rejected a call for an "independent analysis" into the voting data in her state, because she claims there is "no ‘current controversy’ regarding elections in Arizona, outside of theories floated by those seeking to undermine our democratic process for political gain," according to Tuscon.com

In a response letter to Arizona Senate President Karen Fann's (R) call for a review of the state's voting data, Hobbs wrote that it's "patently unreasonable to suggest" that election officials need to prove people calling for an accurate election count, calling it a "negative."

"It is patently unreasonable to suggest that, despite there being zero credible evidence of any impropriety or widespread irregularities, election officials nonetheless have a responsibility to prove a negative," Hobbs wrote.

There's no word as to why Hobbs feels people requesting a recount or confirmation of voting data to prove it's legitimate is "a negative." However, Hobbs made it clear that any question to the results as they're currently presented are nothing more than her previously mentioned quote in which she said that the people doing the questioning of said results are merely to aid "those seeking to undermine our democratic process for political gain."

"To be clear, there is no ‘current controversy’ regarding elections in Arizona, outside of theories floated by those seeking to undermine our democratic process for political gain,” Hobbs said. “Elected officials should work to build, rather than damage, public confidence in our system."

Here's a newsflash - it's a little late to think that the public has any kind of "confidence in our system," no matter who the victor ends up being.

H/T: Breitbart

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