What Trump’s Phone Call with Georgia Officials Really Reveals: New Evidence of Voter Fraud is on the Way, Georgia Officials Haven’t Shared Results of Investigations

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More evidence regarding election fraud in Georgia may soon be made public.

The revelation was made by President Trump during a hour-long phone call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. Mr. Trump pressed Raffensperger on why he is dragging his feet on honestly investigating the allegations of voter fraud that took place in the state.

An audio recording and transcript of the call, which took place yesterday, was published by The Washington Post today.

Many in the mainstream media fixated on the fact that Trump was trying to get Raffensperger to fulfill his duties in ensuring elections in his state are free and fair. But the real news out of the perfectly legitimate phone call seems to be the revelation that Trump’s team is in possession of more evidence of election fraud in the state.


“I mean, look, Brad,” the President told Raffensperger. “We have a new tape that we’re going to release. It’s devastating.”

Additionally, it was revealed that while Georgia officials repeatedly say they’ve debunked many allegations being made about election fraud, none of the information on their internal reviews has been shared with the White House.

The following is an exchange between Mr. Trump, conservative attorney Cleta Mitchell, and Raffensperger’s general counsel Ryan Germany on such evidence as it relates to out-of-state voters in Georgia:

Trump: There’s only two answers, dishonesty or incompetence. There’s just no way. Look. There’s no way. And on the other thing, I said too, there is no way. I mean, there’s no way that these things could have been, you know, you have all these different people that voted, but they don’t live in Georgia anymore. What was that number, Cleta? That was a pretty good number, too.

Mitchell: The number who have registered out of state after they moved from Georgia. And so they had a date when they moved from Georgia, they registered to vote out of state, and then it’s like 4,500, I don’t have that number right in front of me.

Trump: And then they came back in, and they voted.

Mitchell: And voted. Yeah.

Trump: I thought that was a large number, though. It was in the 20s.

Germany: We’ve been going through each of those as well, and those numbers that we got, that Ms. Mitchell was just saying, they’re not accurate. Every one we’ve been through are people that lived in Georgia, moved to a different state, but then moved back to Georgia legitimately. And in many cases —

Trump: How may people do that? They moved out, and then they said, “Ah, to hell with it, I’ll move back.” You know, it doesn’t sound like a very normal . . . you mean, they moved out, and what, they missed it so much that they wanted to move back in? It’s crazy.

Germany: They moved back in years ago. This was not like something just before the election. So there’s something about that data that, it’s just not accurate.

Trump: Well, I don’t know, all I know is that it is certified. And they moved out of Georgia, and they voted. It didn’t say they moved back in, Cleta, did it?

Mitchell: No, but I mean, we’re looking at the voter registration. Again, if you have additional records, we’ve been asking for that, but you haven’t shared any of that with us. You just keep saying you investigated the allegations.

Georgia state legislators have requested an audit of absentee ballots in Fulton County, Georgia’s largest, after hearing from several witnesses who testified to election fraud this week.

Less than 13,000 votes currently separate President Trump and Joe Biden in the state.

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