Does 66% error rate imply that 66% of Biden votes are actual Trump votes? That the election is actually 27m Biden, 124m Trump? Because that's a landslide even I wasn't dreaming of.
No--the error rate means they send all those votes to manual adjudication, where they can then re-allot the percentages of votes they needed to "win." It doesn't mean that they have to flip ALL the 68% of adjudicated votes to Biden. They just needed a way to "adjust" and re-allocate the votes "properly" so that their candidate would be victorious.
I don't understand how there could be so many rejected ballots that go to adjudication, were these mail-in ballots? The write-ins (daffy duck, Kanye, etc) must have been a small percentage, so that doesn't explain the volume. Were there election day in-person rejects? In my precinct ( a non-Dominion MI county), you fill out the bubbles on a sheet, insert it into a ballot scanner which sits atop a lock-box, and if it is filled out correctly, the ballot drops into the lockbox any you get a message on the screen, "congratulations, you voted!" If there's a mistake on the ballot, it kicks it back to you, you give it back to the election staff for them to void in their logs, and they issue a new blank ballot for you to 'try again'. There doesn't seem to be an opportunity for a reject without the voter knowing, on the in-person ballots.
Does 66% error rate imply that 66% of Biden votes are actual Trump votes? That the election is actually 27m Biden, 124m Trump? Because that's a landslide even I wasn't dreaming of.
No--the error rate means they send all those votes to manual adjudication, where they can then re-allot the percentages of votes they needed to "win." It doesn't mean that they have to flip ALL the 68% of adjudicated votes to Biden. They just needed a way to "adjust" and re-allocate the votes "properly" so that their candidate would be victorious.
I don't understand how there could be so many rejected ballots that go to adjudication, were these mail-in ballots? The write-ins (daffy duck, Kanye, etc) must have been a small percentage, so that doesn't explain the volume. Were there election day in-person rejects? In my precinct ( a non-Dominion MI county), you fill out the bubbles on a sheet, insert it into a ballot scanner which sits atop a lock-box, and if it is filled out correctly, the ballot drops into the lockbox any you get a message on the screen, "congratulations, you voted!" If there's a mistake on the ballot, it kicks it back to you, you give it back to the election staff for them to void in their logs, and they issue a new blank ballot for you to 'try again'. There doesn't seem to be an opportunity for a reject without the voter knowing, on the in-person ballots.