Because you seemed to be making a point about how it's not just a "vocal minority". Apologies if I misunderstood.Yes, because that's what I thought you were talking about. People in the same position of those providing affidavits, but who are willing to contradict and denounce the affidavits as lies, not unrelated republicans, not officials who have skin in the game.
Not just any random republican. Why would you think I meant any random republican who wasn't even there?
Right. Then I cannot provide this, because as far as I know, Republican poll-watchers had left. There's nobody who can contradict it (except for non-aligned observers, who you've already discounted).Matt was not at the State Farm Arena, so he cannot comment on the video in question, as he was not an eyewitness.
Look at when it was written (3rd Nov, late evening) and when it was last updated (early morning 4th Nov). It's really, really obvious what happened here. We know for a fact that that counting centre aimed to be finished on the night of the third, because they put out a statement to that effect. Matt Mashburn was watching that announcement live, and attests that he and other poll-watchers thought the timeframe was unrealistic, because they knew how many ballots were left to be counted.Please tell me what you don't understand about "Officials sent ballot counters home at 10:30 p.m. and said they'd return at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday" so that I can make it clear to you.
They were sent home. Not delayed. Sent home. At 10:30. The video, as well as the comments from the election director on the zoom call, corroborates this.
The "Fact-checker" site, the one posted before, says that they were never sent home.
A clear contradiction. Both can't be true.
Then they miss the deadline, and keep counting. Which everybody is aware of, including the Republicans. They can stay if they want, but it's not required.
Early next morning, 11Alive update that old article. They don't know it was delayed as long as it was: you can tell that because there's no mention of the delay announcement, and there's still mention that they hope to be done just 2 hours later than announced. They update it in accordance with what they understood the schedule to be, because the poll-counters announced they should be done and dusted. It's an article with outdated information.
11Alive then write new articles later, attesting to the larger delay. Anybody following along knows the new article obviously supercedes the other one.
There's only a "contradiction" between an article written on the morning of 4th November, with outdated information based on the poll-counters' original statement, and the facts of the matter. They weren't sent home. Everybody, including the outlet you linked to, has made that clear. They just didn't update the old article with that information: they wrote a new one.Nobody, except you, is talking about a delay of "two hours". I don't understand why this "delay" is so important to you, or why you think it even matters at all.
To me, the only thing that matters is the contradiction between "sent home" and "not sent home".
You're the one drawing evidence of conspiracy from the delay in question!Please explain why you think this "delay" even matters.
Yes, that's one purely hypothetical chain of events.If I'm at the Arena, and I want to count ballots in secret, I just need everybody IN THE ROOM to leave. So I'll lie to them and get them to go away, and then they will.
Everybody not in the room (like Matt) will have no idea that I just told them to leave, so they'll think we're still counting. PLUS, I can also make an effort to make it appear as though the count is still going on, and that nobody was told to leave, by simply lying to people who weren't in the room. So when my supervisor walks in and sees no media, or observers, I can just lie and say "oh yeah, I guess they all just got bored and left for absolutely no reason!"
"Shall" is not the word under discussion. "Allowed" is the word under discussion. They were allowed. It doesn't say they "shall/must be present".Well then they must be disagreeing with the SCOTUS, because they ruled that "shall means must"
More likely, the case was A) from another jurisdiction and you're confusing it, or B) thrown out because of some other legal technicality.