Biden’s New Cheat Tool – Rigged Census? 3921

1 year ago
1.04K

Good evening, I’m still reporting on the coup.

So, the Biden Administration has just set a brand new American record – a totally new way to rig elections – falsifying U.S. census data.

According to Monday’s edition of The Daily Signal, when the new U.S. House of Representatives convenes its first new session in January after the 2022 election, the state of Florida will be missing two congressional seats to which they are entitled.

Why? Because according to a post-2020 census survey, the U.S. Census Bureau significantly undercounted Florida’s population, along with 5 other strongly red states. So, what about the Democrat stronghold states? For some strange coincidence, the seven states that were significantly over-counted were all blue states, and the state with the largest overcount percentage was Delaware!

Says who? The author’s name is Hans von Spakovsky. Oh-oh, another Russian media plant? Nope. He is a senior legal fellow at The Heritage Foundation, a former commissioner on the Federal Election Commission, and former counsel to the assistant attorney general for civil rights at the Justice Department. He is also a member of the board of the Public Interest Legal Foundation.

So another coincidence, the top three states who benefited the most from overcounting its population were tiny Delaware, with an overcount of 5.45%. Rhode Island was next with an overcount of 5.05%, then came Minnesota, with a 3.84% overcount. These errors allowed all three to keep a congressional seat to which they otherwise would not be entitled.

Minnesota got to keep its extra seat because it counted 26 more residents than it actually had. I wonder if that count was stopped in the middle of the night when all the Republican census watchers had gone home for the night?

Rhode Island would have lost a seat if the Census Bureau had allotted it 19,000 fewer residents.

Colorado, too was one of the few lucky states to overcount sufficient residents to grant them one additional seat in Congress that it should not have gotten.

Now, some percentages on the other side. Texas was undercounted by 2%, but that was enough to cheat them out of one additional member of Congress.

So what’s the solution here? There appears to be none. There is no remedy in federal law for someone adding and subtracting the real Census figures from certain states.

Was this just an accident? It seems not. The previous Census in 2010 showed a statistically insignificant error of only 0.01%. That is a startling difference from the results of the 2020 census.

According to Mr. Spakovsky:

“Even if the states most affected could win a case in court, how would you come up with a remedy? Ordering the Census Bureau to conduct another actual recount in the 14 affected states would be a complex, expensive undertaking that would provide numbers on a different date than the original census whose population totals from April 1, 2020, would still be in effect for the rest of the states, raising fundamental fairness issues given the high mobility of our population. And ordering a new census of the entire nation also seems impractical.”

So, all Congress can do is to investigate the Census count problem, and hopefully hold someone accountable, and then somehow implement changes that ensure it won’t happen again.

I just wonder what’s going to come up next. Remember, what Facebook founder, Mark Zuckerberg said earlier this year concerning getting caught handing out over $400 million to states to be sure Democrats won at every level of governance. He said words to this effect, “I’ve learned how to be more careful.”

I’m still reporting from just outside the citadel of freedom. Good day.

Loading 12 comments...