Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger | facebook
Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger | facebook
Reported glitches in Dominion Voting Systems voting machines' that have demonstrably resulted in altered vote counts in at least one Michigan county are being assessed.
Dominion has voting machines in three states where Donald Trump has filed lawsuits – Michigan, Georgia and Nevada.
The voting glitches came to light after Antrim County, Michigan, which is highly Republican, turned in results showing Joe Biden had won the county.
Dominion Voting Systems software has been rejected in other states, like Texas. The Texas Secretary of State and the Texas Attorney General’s Office both rejected Dominion three times, after stating that it didn’t meet basic security standards.
However, Michigan, Nevada and Georgia all use the software.
In Michigan, after 6,000 votes were tabulated for Biden instead of Trump in Antrim County, Republican Party Chairwoman Laura Cox said that more than half of the state’s counties used the same software and they needed to be examined to confirm if there were similar discrepancies.
In Georgia, Trump wants votes to be recounted. He and the state’s Republican Party allege votes were being counted that were received after polls closed. In Gwinnett County, technical glitches caused thousands of votes to be delayed.
Several Georgia lawmakers called for Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to resign, which Raffensperger said he would not do. He said he would continue to investigate potential double voters and that he cared about counting every legal vote and making sure illegal votes were not counted.