The Vote That Counts is Electoral

The Electoral College meets on December 14, after the Secretaries of State of all 50 states have tabulated and certified the votes in their state. Every state has a different deadline to certify. My home state of Arizona is the last one to do so on November 30.

The electoral votes are the ones that count in America’s democracy, not the popular vote. That is why in my book Custom Maid Revolution for New World Disorder, pages 13, 797-798, 819-821 and 917 (see the free chapter download at the bottom of the page), I advocate the abolition of the Electoral College as a relic of America’s Pony Express days.

In my humble opinion, this is the reason why President Trump is not conceding until “every legal vote is counted.”

I reserve the right to be wrong.

The Electoral College vote is the one that counts — and probably the one Trump is waiting for and banking on — hoping he can get at least 38 Faithless Electors, thus denying former Vice President Biden the presidential win he claims and allow Trump to be sworn in again as president on January 20.

In the 2016 presidential election there were seven Faithless Electors.

The U.S. election is far from over. Dates to watch are December 8, the date by which all conflicts, court cases and recounts are concluded.

December 14, the date electors meet and start voting.

December 23, the date all electoral ballots are received by Vice President Mike Pence in his role as president of the Senate, secretaries of state of each state, and district judges in the districts where the electors meet; and

January 6, when Congress meets to count and certify the electoral vote.

I, for one, can’t wait to see America’s political Christmas gift and New Year wish.

Did President Trump rig the Electoral College vote?

If you like this article consider purchasing a book.

Illustration: Mark Caparosa

Download a free chapter which contain pages 13, 797-798, 819-821 and 917 from Custom Maid Revolution for New World Disorder.