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Sen Doug Mastriano: “We Will Have A Meeting, We Will Vote On Subpoenas, And Let The Fun Begin”


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Subpoenas are inbound!

At least that’s what Doug Mastriano is saying…..

The Senator’s comments came in response to 3 counties who are refusing to comply with audit requests; the three counties are Tioga, York, and Philadelphia, according to The Epoch Times.

By now it’s become a classic question, but what are they hiding?

Why not just comply with the audit? If it’s about funding, I am sure Pennsylvania’s State Senate will pay for or greatly subsidize the costs associated with the audit.

The concerning thing is that Philadelphia is one of the cities refusing the audit, yet it’s probably the biggest concern of any potential audit.

I don’t need to tell you that the legal battle, and ensuing media circus, centered around Philadelphia fighting this audit  are both going to be messy and lengthy.

Here’s what Senator Doug Mastriano had to say:

Senator Mastriano’s comments appeared in The Epoch Times:

“We’re eagerly awaiting my committee coming together when I can get a quorum, get everyone’s calendars matched up—it is summertime. As soon as I get a quorum, we will have a meeting, we will vote on subpoenas, and let the fun begin,” Pennsylvania Sen. Doug Mastriano, a Republican who chairs the state Senate’s Intergovernmental Operations Committee, said on One America News last week.

Mastriano initiated a forensic probe of the 2020 and 2021 elections in early July by sending requests for materials such as ballots and for access to voting machines to Tioga, York, and Philadelphia counties.

But officials in all three counties are refusing to comply, setting up the need for subpoenas.

https://twitter.com/Listen4V/status/1422056197750992897

CNN had more on why the counties are refusing to comply:

The Pennsylvania Department of State instructed counties earlier this month not to hand over their voting machines, warning the machines would be decertified and counties would have to replace them at their own expense. The acting secretary of state already decertified the voting system in Pennsylvania’s Fulton County “because it was subjected to a post-election review by a third party in violation of Pennsylvania’s Election Code.”

The letter from Philadelphia commissioners notes that replacing their voting equipment alone would cost more than $35 million and well over a year to implement. Deeley wrote that cooperating with Mastriano’s request would “render it impossible for Philadelphia to conduct the November 2021 General Election as well as the May 2022 Primary Election.”

The Tioga County Commissioners raised similar concerns, saying they can’t cooperate unless the state Senate provides funds for new election machines.



 

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