Sen. Amanda Chase, R-Chesterfield, rallied with several dozen supporters outside the state Capitol on Monday to call for a “forensic audit” of Virginia’s electoral process. Since the November election former President Donald Trump and many of his supporters have continued to promote debunked or unsubstantiated claims of election fraud that election officials and courts have rejected. Democrat Joe Biden beat Trump in Virginia by 10 percentage points. “It’s so imperative that we make 100% sure that voters have 100% confidence in our election process,” Chase said at the Capitol Monday speaking in front of perhaps two dozen supporters holding homemade signs. “It’s important that we audit Virginia. It’s important we have a forensic audit, not the faux audit that the State Board of Elections did.” Chase said that when the General Assembly makes decisions Virginians need to know that “these people are elected by we the people” and that the decisions they make “are what the people want.” In March the Virginia Department of Elections said that election administrators around the state had completed an audit of ballot scanner machines used in the November elections in which Biden defeated Trump and Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., beat Republican Daniel Gade.
Maryland: Anne Arundel judge expected to rule this week in Annapolis vote-by-mail lawsuit | Brooks Dubose/Baltimore Sun
An Anne Arundel judge is expected to rule this week after hearing opposing sides Monday in a lawsuit brought by two Republican political candidates who say a newly implemented vote-by-mail system in Annapolis violates City Code and could be the source of voter fraud. Herb McMillan, a candidate for county executive in 2022, and George Gallagher, who’s running for Annapolis City Council in Ward 6, filed the lawsuit in July requesting the court stop the city from mailing ballots to every registered voter later this month for the upcoming Sept. 21 primary and Nov. 2 general election. The complaint also notes the code requires voters to pay for returned postage on absentee ballots. The new system would see the city pay for the postage instead. In a hearing with Circuit Judge Glenn L. Klavans on Monday, the plaintiffs and their attorney Charles Muskin sought to show how they would be harmed by the city’s actions. While attorneys for the city and the county elections board argued that state election law, a City Council resolution and the ongoing states of emergency in Annapolis and Maryland give the city the power to introduce a vote-by-mail option. After three hours of testimony, Klavans said he would make a decision in the case “in the next couple days.”
Full Article: Anne Arundel judge expected to rule this week in Annapolis vote-by-mail lawsuit – Baltimore Sun