by Belle Carter, Natural News:
California’s U.S. Senate primary race just concluded last week and in a deep blue state where Democratic voters outnumber Republicans 2-1, former L.A. Dodger star Steve Garvey ran against three Democrats and came in a close second to Democratic Congressman Adam Schiff. As per the Associated Press, the Schiff-Garvey matchup resulted in 38 percent of the expected votes counted Tuesday night.
However, a watchdog account on X, formerly Twitter, shared a very important observation during the live counting of votes. @MJTruthUltra opened the social media post with: “Every Californian needs to understand what just happened. You’re Redder thank you think” and proceeded to expose how Garvey got robbed of votes in real-time counting, “Steve Garvey was leading Adam Schiff with 1.8 million votes. And just like that, it was cut in half,” the post said. “This is called the Glitch Switch. And Adam Schiff got more votes in the end by a razor-thin margin. Almost statistically impossible.”
TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
The final count was 1,247,723 or 33.2 percent for Schiff and 1,220,683 or 32.5 percent for Garvey. He continued to point out that, it was an algorithm that is trying to figure out the math problem that is “YOU.” “Elections are an additive process, never negative. Each raw data interval of reported votes should be an additive process and you shouldn’t see any deletions or oscillations.”
Every Californian needs to understand what just happened. You’re Redder thank you Think…
They Robbed Votes from Steve Garvey in front of everyone.
Steve Garvey was leading Adam Schiff with 1.8 million votes. And just like that, it was cut in half.
This is called the Glitch… https://t.co/Wh97tJ3Uzs pic.twitter.com/w5yFR8H76M
— MJTruthUltra (@MJTruthUltra) March 6, 2024
The video below will best show how the rigging happened right in front of everyone’s eyes.
Despite this, people from the Golden State still consider this a “miracle.” Garvey, 74, is the best statewide Republican prospect to come along in decades. He has never held public office, but it looks like he knows how to win a tough fight. In the primary, the odds were stacked heavily against him in every way. He only entered the race in October, took out no TV ads, staged no major events and raised only $2 million compared with the $30 million Schiff blew on his campaign.
Garvey focused his primary campaign on sensible, down-the-middle fastball things such as quality-of-life issues, education and public safety, according to observers. His chances of beating Schiff and getting in the U.S. Senate may be slim. But, as he said in his victory speech Tuesday night, it’s the first game of a double-header, and there still are a lot of innings to play.