Election results are being altered by Dominion voting machines. Tabulation errors have swayed the results in favour of one candidate leading to rigged elections. Dominion voting machines have proven to be unreliable and may be easily tampered with or hacked into. Paper ballots have proved to be much more reliable when hand counted and often the machines will tabulate a result that does not match with the hand counted ballots.
Puerto Rico recently had an election in which the Dominion machine count differed significantly from the hand counted ballots. The Popular Democrat party had 350 ballots showing inaccurate results and the New Progressive Party had 700 ballots with inaccurate results. Puerto Rico used more than 6000 Dominion machines in the primaries. Many of the machines reported lower vote counts than the paper ballots as well as zero votes for some candidates or reversed totals. Puerto Rico is now reevaluating its election machine contract due to the tabulation errors.
In Arizona, Kari Lake attorneys claim that Dominion voting machines have a “built in security breach enabling malicious actors to take control of elections”. For this reason Kari Lake took a case to the Supreme Court in order to get Dominion voting machines banned in Arizona. Her case was refused by the Supreme court.
The Supreme Court of the United States has been extremely incompetent on the issue of election fraud. They often refuse cases and are not implementing any solutions in this regard. They have also refused to overturn the results of the 2020 Presidential election.
Dominion has responded to election fraud accusations by suing those exposing the tabulating errors such as Mike Lindell and Fox News. Fox News paid $787 million to Dominion after being convicted of defamation. Dominion is continuing to seek $1.3 billion dollars in its ongoing case against Mike Lindell.
40% of Americans will be using Dominion voting machines in the 2024 Presidential election. This could result in further evidence against Dominion if there is tabulation errors in the 2024 election. Especially, if the tabulation errors sway the results strongly in favor of one candidate.