‘Absolutely Not True’: Kristi Noem Hits Back At ABC Host’s Claim That There’s ‘Zero Evidence’ Of ‘Widespread Fraud’

November 9, 2020 in News by RBN Staff

source:  tathasta

  in NEWS

 

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South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem denied challenges from ABC News host George Stephanopoulos that no evidence of voter fraud has been found that could have impacted the results of the 2020 election.

Noem appeared on Stephanopoulos’ program “This Week” on Sunday to discuss the 2020 election among other topics. The ABC host pushed Noem to defend President Trump’s ongoing refusal to concede the election while legal challenges to the vote canvassing process in battleground states play out in the courts.

Stephanopoulos questioned Noem about alleged evidence of “widespread fraud.”

“Governor Noem, do you have any evidence that it wasn’t an honest election?” Stephanopoulos asked, adding: “Do you have any evidence at all of widespread fraud? I’ve spoken with Republican secretaries of state in Georgia, in Arizona; I’ve spoken [with] Republican officials across the country. They have come up with zero evidence of widespread fraud.”

The Republican governor denied Stephanopoulos’ assertion, saying that investigators have turned up evidence of voter fraud that deserve further examination and challenge through lawsuits.

“That is not true. That is absolutely not true,” Noem began, pushing back on the host’s claims that there is no evidence of “widespread fraud.” “People have signed legal documents, affidavits stating that they saw illegal activities, and that is why we need to have this conversation in court.”

Noem went on to provide several specific examples of voter fraud claims worth investigating and litigating through the courts to ensure that nothing irregular happened.

“The New York Times itself said that there were clerical errors. If you look at what happened in Michigan, that we had computer glitches that changed Republican votes to Democrat votes. You look in Pennsylvania, dead people voted in Pennsylvania,” Noem said. “So, George, I don’t know how widespread it is. I don’t know if it’ll change the outcome of the election, but why is everybody so scared just to have a fair election and find out.”

In Michigan, the secretary of state has challenged GOP officials’ claims that a glitch switched 6,000 votes to Biden. State officials instead say that a clerical error resulted in the erroneous results.

“We gave Al Gore 37 days to run the process before we decided who was going to be president,” Noem said, referencing the 2000 presidential election between former President George W. Bush and former Vice President Al Gore. “Why would we not afford the 70.6 million Americans that voted for President Trump the same consideration.”

Bush on Sunday issued a statement congratulating Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden as the president-elect, but also reiterated that President Trump has the “right” to pursue litigation over the election regarding instances of alleged voter fraud.

“President Trump has the right to request recounts and pursue legal challenges, and any unresolved issues will be properly adjudicated. The American people can have confidence that this election was fundamentally fair, its integrity will be upheld, and its outcome is clear,” Bush said.

All major media outlets have declared Biden the winner of the election. The calls are premature, however, as legal challenges brought by the Trump campaign in battleground states key to the outcome of the election work their way through the court system.