Gingrich's Backers Accuse Santorum's Backers of Voter Fraud
Gingrich's Religious Backers Accuse Santorum's Religious Backers of Voter Fraud and Rigging the Election at Weekend's Anti-Romney Pow-Wow in TX!
Latest incident in emerging 2012 GOP voter fraud epidemic...
By Brad Friedman
January 16
2012
This is just too hilarious!
Over the weekend religious activists met somewhere in Texas to try and agree upon a "conservative" non-Romney to coalesce behind in hopes of stopping the former Massachusetts Governor's "inevitable" GOP nomination. After three ballots, reportedly, the group of some 150 religious activists finally agreed to throw their support behind Rick Santorum.
Or did they?
According to a supposedly "legitimate" rightwing news outlet today, the evangelical protestant backers of Newt Gingrich are now accusing the Catholic supporters of Santorum of election fraud and actual voter fraud!
If they did, it would hardly be the first instance of actual election fraud in the GOP camp to rear its ugly head during the Republican primary process to date...
As reported by the Washington Times today...
A civil war is breaking out among evangelical leaders over allegations of a rigged election and ballot stuffing at a Saturday gathering of religious and social conservatives.
At the meeting about 150 religious conservative activists at the Benham, Texas, ranch of Nancy and Paul Pressler, Rick Santorum supporters claimed the former Pennsylvania senator was chosen on the third ballot as the consensus candidate to try to stop Mitt Romney's march to the Republican presidential nomination.
The meeting was called to avoid a continued division within social conservatives' ranks.
But in back-and-forth emails, Protestant fundamentalist leaders who attended - most of them backing former House Speaker Newt Gingrich to be the anti-Romney candidate - are accusing Catholic participants of conniving to rig the vote.
They said they were conned into leaving after the second ballot on Saturday. They said pro-Santorum participants held a third ballot which Mr. Santorum won with more than 70 percent of the vote - far higher than the nine-vote margin he won on the first ballot.
"My view is that the vote was manipulated," said a prominent social conservative who asked not to be named.
Now, a prominent evangelical political organizer is saying to others confidentially he has evidence that in a least one instance a participant was seen writing Mr. Santorum's name on four separate ballots and putting them in the ballot box.
Golly, we can only wonder if these alleged fraudsters were required to show Photo ID before allegedly stuffing the ballot box for Santorum!
But perhaps it's just karma, given Gingrich's admission that his campaign submitted 1,500 fraudulent signatures in their failed attempt to get onto the Republican Primary ballot in Virginia.
(Please also note: To our knowledge, though Gingrich admitted on video tape that his campaign hired "one guy who frankly committed fraud" --- massive fraud at that --- the name of that "one guy" has neither been made public nor turned over to Virginia law enforcement as, say, ACORN always did whenever they discovered that a worker had been defrauding them by turning in fraudulent signatures on voter registration forms.)
Washington Times finishes their report with this [emphasis ours]...
Mr. Romney won Iowa’s caucuses by eight votes over Mr. Santorum, but won New Hampshire’s primary more handily. He holds a lead in the polls heading into next weekend’s South Carolina primary, though that lead could easily disappear if conservative voters here unified behind a single alternate candidate.
But it's also not clear that Romney actual "won" the Iowa Caucuses at all! While he was named the unofficial winner on Election Night, January 3rd, by a slim 8 votes by the GOP which runs the caucuses and sets all of the rules for participants (no Photo ID required) and for registering and voting on the same day (no Photo ID required) and for casting votes (on hand-marked paper ballots) and tabulation (hand-counted in public, at the caucus site, with results announced right then and there before results are called into the GOP headquarters and before ballots are moved anywhere), the results as reported by the Iowa GOP on their website appear to be wrong.
Though the charge by Ron Paul supporter Edward True that Romney received just 2 votes, instead of 22, at the caucus where True was a vote counter has now been confirmed, Santorum had previously suggested he'd been told that a separate reporting error would cancel out that bookkeeping error thankfully uncovered by True.
Over the weekend, however, Santorum was singing a different tune at a campaign appearance in South Carolina where, according to Politico's James Hohmann, he claimed "Iowa's not done yet. They're recounting those ballots right now."
Hohmann went on to report: "Kim Lehman, the Republican National Committeewoman from Iowa — and a Santorum endorser — confirmed that a recount is under way and echoed the predictions that it might change the result."
The certified totals are to be announced by the GOP in Iowa on Tuesday, after which we'll be able to see who really won or lost. Given the superb example of transparent, fully-overseeable vote-counting the GOP allowed their voters to use in Iowa --- which we previously described as a model for the nation --- any changes made via additional secret recounts behind closed doors should be verifiable, or disproved, by the thousands who witnessed the actual results being counted before their eyes at their own caucuses.
Sadly --- and hilariously --- the same cannot be said of the apparently secret vote counting and voter fraud that is alleged to have taken place at the GOP religious activists' pow-wow in Texas over the weekend.
For all of the fraud Republicans claim (without evidence to support the charge) that Democrats are carrying out in elections, they sure do seem to commit a whole lotta fraud in their own elections, eh? Just ask Indiana's Republican Sec. of State and chief election official Charlie White, who is now facing 3 felony voter fraud charges and has now been ordered by a judge to be removed from office for it --- or for that matter, just ask apparent voter fraud criminal Mitt Romney!
Then, of course, there is James O'Keefe's apparent voter fraud conspiracy which he conveniently video-taped for us during the New Hampshire primary last week, leading to a call from the Republican Mayor of Manchester (and others) for him to be "arrested and prosecuted."
Oh, the tangled webs...
ENDS