‘I will uphold my oath’: Nebraska Sen. Deb Fischer says widespread voter fraud not proven in 2020 election – KETV Omaha
e wanna thank you very much. Hello, Georgia. By the way, there’s no way we lost Georgia. There’s no way Rig that was a rigged election. But we’re still fighting it and you’ll see what’s going to happen. We’ll talk about it. And I just wanna thank you. This is some crowd, you know, Biden was here today. Also, they had 14 people in three cars. Now there was no way on. I just want to thank you. You know, I’ve had two elections. I won both of them. It’s amazing. I have to tell you that the stakes of this election could not be higher. You vote tomorrow, will decide which party controls the United States Senate. The radical Democrats air trying to capture Georgia’s Senate seats so they could wield unchecked, unrestrained absolute power over every aspect of your lives off with liberal Democrats. Take the Senate of the White House and then I take it this White House we’re gonna fight like hell. I’ll tell you right now on, I hope Mike Pence comes through for us. I have to tell you, I hope that our great vice President, our great vice president, comes through for us He’s a great guy. Course. If he doesn’t come through, I won’t like him quite as much. You vote tomorrow, could lose. And it could be your last chance to save the America that we love. That’s why I’m here. I don’t want to do rallies for other people. I told you I’m here because of that. Because of David and Kelly, the far left wants to destroy our country. Demolish our history on erase everything that we hold dear. This could be the most important vote you will ever cast for the rest of your life. It really could be.
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‘I will uphold my oath’: Nebraska Sen. Deb Fischer says widespread voter fraud not proven in 2020 election
On Tuesday, U.S. Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.) released a statement on the certifying of the electoral college votes in the 2020 Presidential Election. She began by saying that while she voted for President Donald Trump twice, “the president’s legal team failed to make the case in court to any judge, including some appointed by President Trump, or to criminal investigators, that widespread voter fraud existed sufficient to overturn election results in any state.””Unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud are not enough to discard the election results of states where I may not like the outcome,” she said. Fischer said there “are no do-overs.” “If a state’s results are not counted tomorrow, millions of voters across the country will be disenfranchised. Such an extreme action should only be taken with proof of widespread malfeasance. No such proof has been presented. Therefore, it would not be proper for Congress, an inherently political body, to substitute its judgment for the will of the people or for that of states that certified their results. As a United States Senator, I swore an oath to support and defend the Constitution. I will uphold my oath and vote to affirm the decision of the Electoral College. May God bless our great republic, and may He grant us the strength to unite in moving forward for the good of the nation,” she wrote.
On Tuesday, U.S. Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.) released a statement on the certifying of the electoral college votes in the 2020 Presidential Election.
She began by saying that while she voted for President Donald Trump twice, “the president’s legal team failed to make the case in court to any judge, including some appointed by President Trump, or to criminal investigators, that widespread voter fraud existed sufficient to overturn election results in any state.”
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“Unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud are not enough to discard the election results of states where I may not like the outcome,” she said.
Fischer said there “are no do-overs.”
“If a state’s results are not counted tomorrow, millions of voters across the country will be disenfranchised. Such an extreme action should only be taken with proof of widespread malfeasance. No such proof has been presented. Therefore, it would not be proper for Congress, an inherently political body, to substitute its judgment for the will of the people or for that of states that certified their results. As a United States Senator, I swore an oath to support and defend the Constitution. I will uphold my oath and vote to affirm the decision of the Electoral College. May God bless our great republic, and may He grant us the strength to unite in moving forward for the good of the nation,” she wrote.
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