12-7-2021
Mike Lindell's nightmare:
Conservative group finds Trump did better than expected
in counties with Dominion machines.
A conservative legal group found “no evidence of fraud”
in Wisconsin during the last presidential election.
But that top-line conclusion confirming
the obvious wasn’t quite as striking as one that
had to rock the world of MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell.
The Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty (WILL) -- a far-right nonprofit legal firm that has sued to stop mask mandates among its initiatives -- conducted a 10-month review of Wisconsin’s 2020 election.
It didn’t mince words about one of the key tenets
of the Big Lie.
The more interesting findings have to do with how Trump fared in counties that used Dominion voting machines, which Lindell infamously accused of rigging the election for President Joe Biden.
“Donald Trump won communities that used Dominion voting machines with 57.2%, an increase from 2016," the report states.
Just 14.7% of Wisconsin jurisdictions employ the Dominion voting machines, maligned by many
as a culprit in changing votes for Joe Biden."
In fact, the report overall found "Democrats actually did worse than expected in areas that used Dominion machines.”
The WILL findings, released today, had started on what might have seemed an optimistic note for
Trump sycophants:
And this: “There was no evidence of widespread voter fraud. In all likelihood, more eligible voters cast ballots for Joe Biden than Donald Trump.
We found little direct evidence of fraud, and for the most part, an analysis of the results and voting patterns does not give rise to an inference of fraud.”
“Our hand review found that the counts closely matched those reported by the Wisconsin Elections Commission (WEC)," the group explains.
"The review found no evidence of fraudulent ballots. The wards WILL reviewed came from: Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay, Fox Crossing, Mequon, Waukesha, and West Bend.
In many of the wards examined, WILL found a significant number of voters who voted for Biden
and a Republican for Congress, while far fewer
voters split the other way.
This is consistent with the explanation that a key driver of Trump’s loss was a segment of traditional Republican voters choosing not to support him."