Kerry denies the allegations but it is classic "Kerry working for all our enemies" as he has done during and since Vietnam. He is a scumbag traitor and that will be true regardless of whether this is true or not. Of course the lefties see no problem here anyway. That is what they want him to be doing. Kerry faces calls to step down over leaked Iran tapes John Kerry, the U.S. special envoy for climate change, is facing calls for his resignation from Republican lawmakers and pundits for reportedly discussing Israeli military operations with Iran’s foreign minister when he served as then-President Obama’s secretary of State. Republican blowback is running the gamut from calling for Kerry to leave his position as the top official addressing climate change to calling for an investigation and his prosecution. Biden administration officials are dismissing the allegations, saying the information Kerry allegedly shared was widely known at the time. Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) called for Kerry’s resignation in a floor speech, one of several senators to do so Monday. “I don’t do this lightly. I https://thehill.com/policy/internat...ces-calls-to-step-down-over-leaked-iran-tapes
Total and complete irrelevant bullshit. Just more fearmongering. The libtards are shitting their pants. Libtards are doing everything they can to stop and/or discredit the audit. Why are liberals so scared? Libtards: There is no evidence of widespread election fraud. Repubs: Since over half the country thinks that Biden cheated in the election, lets do an audit to determine if there was fraud to instill trust in elections and the US democracy. Libtards: NO!!! You can't do an audit. Making sure there is not fraud undermines democracy.
Get an audit firm that is professional with long audit experience to do the audit. Not an audit firm owned by someone who promotes "voter fraud" nonsense continually whose firm has zero experience. This audit is a joke.
No it is not a joke. You are just repeating libtard talking points just like a good little sheeple. You should change your handle to msnbc.com.
I agree, would be nicer to have a professional audit firm. But no professional audit firm would do it because of the hell and cancel culture they'd be subject to. That's the problem. Its such a crime to think something different than you've essentially silenced any opposing viewpoint. So they don't have a choice but to do it this way. The smart way to do it would be to allow audits without the premise of it being "crazy" and let them do their thing and silence the majority of concerns. But no, this is preferable in your crAZy world.
Was is just a coincidence that exgoper's massive volume of post stopped as soon as gwb-trading started posting again?
The first requirement for an audit firm is that they must disclose their methods. The contract for this Arizona effort actually states they must disclose their methods but the company is trying to keep everything secret. How can anyone have any confidence in their "audit results" if the company will not reveal how they came to those results. Firm seeks to to have methods for Arizona ballot audit kept secret https://tucson.com/news/state-and-r...cle_812aea22-a6b3-11eb-988a-cf2bed9e8bb7.html The attorney for the firm hired by the Arizona Senate to audit the 2020 election is trying to deny public access to the policies and procedures it is using to audit the returns. And Alexander Kolodin who represents Cyber Ninjas, also contends the firm is not required to ensure that the 2.1 million ballots they have are being reviewed by bipartisan teams. In new legal filings, Kolodin said he is providing the information demanded last week by Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Christopher Coury after the Arizona Democratic Party filed suit. That ranges from how the company ensures the chain of custody for the 2.1 million ballots it now has as well as the election equipment turned over by Maricopa County to issues of signature verification. Kolodin contends it is not in the public interest to let Arizonans see them. “It is no secret that this audit is an emotional issue,” Kolodin wrote. “There exists a subset of individuals that might utilize such documents as a roadmap to breach the audit’s security and thereby cause the very harms (the Democratic Party) ostensibly seek to prevent.” Anyway, he argued, the documents about the firm’s practices contain “trade secrets.” The move is drawing opposition from the First Amendment Coalition which represents various media organizations. In his own legal filing, attorney Dan Barr said there is a presumption that all records, including those produced in litigation, are public. He acknowledged there are some exceptions. But Barr said the claim by Cyber Ninjas that all of its policies constitute trade secrets holds no water. If there are valid concerns, he said, the company could file a redacted version, with all the secrets blacked out, with a full version filed with that court. That, Barr said, would let a judge determine if any of this really needs to be withheld from the public. “It is difficult to conceive of a case that warrants transparency more than this one,” he wrote, noting that Cyber Ninjas is a private firm which has “unfettered access” to the ballots and to information about Maricopa County voters. “The public, especially 2.1 million Maricopa County voters, has a personal stake in knowing how Cyber Ninjas handles their personal information, including names, addresses, and signatures and whether their fundamental right to have their vote remain secret shall be preserved,” Barr wrote. “The public also maintains an exceedingly important interest in knowing that the integrity of the election and their votes will not be compromised.” And Barr said this is especially critical given that Cyber Ninjas has never conducted an election audit and that Doug Logan, its CEO, has “a history of overt partisanship in favor of the presidential candidate who lost the election.” All this comes amid questions about how the audit is being conducted. The Democratic Party lawsuit contends that the processes being used by Cyber Ninjas to review the ballots and the election equipment violates various election laws. It’s attorney, Roopali Desai, wants a judge to halt the process unless and until the company — and the Senate which hired it — can show there are safeguards in place to protect the security of the ballots and the equipment. That question of how the audit is being conducted and whether it is fair also figure into Kolodin’s claim that Cyber Ninjas is not required to have bipartisan panels review the ballots they are counting. Kolodin acknowledged that state law requires the election boards that review ballots to have “as equal as practicable representation of the members of the two largest parties” on these review panels. But Kolodin said that, as far as his client is concerned, that doesn’t apply. “Cyber Ninjas, however, is not an election board and has not been hired to conduct an election for the purpose of declaring candidates elected or not elected,” he wrote. Instead, Kolodin said, the firm was hired to develop a report for the Senate about the conduct of the 2020 election, information he said the Senate can use to decide whether to enact changes to the law. And Kolodin said, his client can’t make such decisions. “Unlike a board of elections, Cyber Ninjas, as a government contractor, and like a government in other contexts, does not believe it is required, or even permitted, to make hiring decisions on the basis of political affiliation,” he said. Anyway, Kolodin said, finding Democrats has proven difficult after Raquel Teran, who chairs the party, announced that it would not participate in what it sees as “sham audits.” “The Arizona Democratic Party certainly has a First Amendment right to instruct its members not to participate in the audit,” he said. Yet at the same time, Kolodin noted, the party filed suit seeking to halt the audit because it was not being conducted in a lawful manner. “Seeking to have this court compel equal representation of Democrats on the counting floor while working to make that impossible is not good faith litigation conduct,” he said. And it can’t be used to stop the audit until it meets certain standards. A hearing had been scheduled Monday to address the issues. But that was before Coury, the judge, realized that one of the attorneys working with Kolodin had done some work with his office. Coury disqualified himself. And the case was reassigned to Judge Daniel Martin who is expected to hold a hearing at 11 a.m. Tuesday.