Two Ways Trump Can TIE and Still win

3 years ago
101

In my videos, I have maintained that Donald Trump can and will still win.

But since there have been some people critical of my analysis as being irrationally exuberant, this time I’ll take my absolute lowest projected number of votes Trump can up with and still win: 269 votes.

But wait, you may say, that would be a tie: 269 for Trump and 269 for Biden, so how would Trump win?

Watch.

First off, there are two ways for the 2020 election to be a tie, but in each case, Trump still wins.

But before I begin this un-reported scenario, I want to repeat my emphatic believe that Trump has this thing won, hands down.

In scenario #1: with all states voting in the Electoral College, and even if the courts do not rule in Trump’s favor in Pennsylvania, after examining the evidence including allowing 600,000 votes to be counted without allowing election observers, Trump still ties, assuming he wins the states that are within a half of one percent.

This includes Arizona, Georgia and Wisconsin. And with the widespread vote fraud in these 3 states, a court should allow a recount with Trump prevailing.

Georgia is a no-brainer since it is an automatic re-count if within a half of one percent, and it was about a quarter of one percent.

Arizona allows recounts by a court order.

Wisconsin is a bit trickier since they don’t typically allow candidate recounts, only recounts on ballot questions. But with the vote spread of only .63%, it’s likely a higher court will require a recount.

As for the outcome of any recounts, it’s virtually assured to be vastly in Trump’s favor, and I think we all know why.

So, assuming Trump wins Arizona’s 11 electoral votes, Georgia’s 16 electoral votes, and Wisconsin’s 10 electoral votes, even without Pennsylvania, Trump and Biden TIE with 269 votes apiece.

In scenario #2, it is quite possible that Pennsylvania gets disqualified from voting in the electoral college due to widespread voter fraud. New York was a victim of these scenario 200 years ago. Even while being in the Union, they still were not allowed an electoral college vote. In such a case, their 20 votes get subtracted and the number of votes necessary to win drops from 270 to 260. In such a case, Trump wins by a blowout of 269 to 249. And if he loses Wisconsin, it’s still a TIE: 259 to 259.

Either way, how would the tie be broken? It’s tricky. Technically, it’s broken in the House, but not the House as we know it. It’s a specially convened House of 50 representatives, one from each state, so it has more of a Senate vibe to it, with Republicans having the edge with a vote for Trump virtually assured. But it doesn’t end there since there can be a Democrat vice president serving alongside Republican President Donald Trump for his second term.

As a footnote to Trump winning in both scenarios, there is a third possibility, albeit an unlikely one. If in the newly constructed House, if there is a Republican holdout or two, it is technically possible to still be a tie by noon, January 20, 2021, with the vice president automatically becoming President Mike Pence, with Republicans still holding the Senate and Presidency, just has they have for the past 4 years.

---Jerry McGlothlin, co-chairman of 20 Days to Save The USA.

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