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Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Navarro asks to delay Senate runoff due to concern of ‘irregularities’

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White House adviser Peter Navarro | whitehouse.gov

White House adviser Peter Navarro | whitehouse.gov

White House adviser Peter Navarro wants Georgia election officials to delay the Senate runoff election scheduled for Jan. 5 until concerns about election irregularities can be resolved.

Navarro said in last month’s report that there were six issues with the November election in battleground states. 

“This was theft by a thousand cuts across six dimensions and six battleground states rather than any one single ‘silver bullet’ election irregularity,” Navarro wrote in the report’s observation. “While all six battleground states exhibit most, or all, six dimensions of election irregularities, each state has a unique mix of issues that might be considered ‘most important.'”

Navarro noted that Georgia had issues on all six categories during the November election and those issues need to be resolved before the Senate runoff elections take place.

“We got to move that election to February,” Navarro told Just the News in an interview for Real America’s Voice TV network, “because everything that I described in my chart … that matrix, every single check mark in those six dimensions, it is a cesspool. And they are doubling down on everything they did wrong in the first election.”

Navarro said it would be tough, but that the delay would allow for the irregularities to be fixed.

“But if we get to Inauguration Day, and we inaugurate an illegal and illegitimate president, in the eyes of the public and based on the evidence, this is not going to be pretty for years to come,” Navarro said.

Even after a multitude of lawsuit alleging fraud, Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, both Republicans, have said they believe the state’s elections are reliable. 

In Georgia’s runoff election, Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, both Republicans, are facing Democrats Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff. 

Currently, there are 50 Republicans and 48 Democrats secured for Senate seats. The decisions for Perdue and Loeffler’s seats will change the makeup of the Senate.

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