Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, the Democratic incumbent, won reelection according to unofficial results. Her Republican opponent, Matt DePerno, conceded. He didn’t say that the election was stolen from him. Such claims are unfounded.
p. But when the Republican candidate for attorney general in Michigan lost his own race in the 2022 midterms, he conceded.on Nov. 9."Although I may be conceding to Dana Nessel today, I refuse to concede that Michigan is a blue state. I will continue to fight like hell to restore Michigan to all it can be. Thank you to each and every one of you!""Another race being stolen in the middle of the night from Matt DePerno," an Instagramfrom Lindell said on Nov. 9.
The post includes a graphic that shows a surge of votes for Nessel after 1 a.m. Eastern Standard Time on Nov. 9 and a lesser surge for DePerno.
Norge Siste Nytt, Norge Overskrifter
Similar News:Du kan også lese nyheter som ligner på denne som vi har samlet inn fra andre nyhetskilder.
PolitiFact - Ask PolitiFact: What would speed up election results?Close races and mail ballots means that it takes several days or longer to tabulate unofficial results. But state laws that set earlier deadlines to mail out and return ballots can speed up the process. It also helps if voters submit mail ballots earlier.
Les mer »
Michigan Beefs Up Tunnel Security After Incident With Michigan StateThe changes will take effect ahead of this weekend’s game against Nebraska.
Les mer »
PolitiFact - No, this graph doesn’t prove Gretchen Whitmer stole her electionSome counties in Michigan overwhelmingly went for Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in the gubernatorial race. That’s not evidence of fraud.
Les mer »
PolitiFact - No, this graph doesn’t prove Gretchen Whitmer stole her electionSome counties in Michigan overwhelmingly went for Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in the gubernatorial race. That’s not evidence of fraud.
Les mer »
PolitiFact - No, this map doesn’t delegitimize the New York governor’s raceA map appearing to show identical vote counts for the candidates in multiple counties does not reflect the NY Gov race’s true results.
Les mer »