Groups funded by liberal billionaire call for governor’s recusal from vote recount
Two groups funded by liberal billionaire George Soros have threatened Governor Rick Scott with legal action if he doesn’t recuse himself from the vote recount in Florida, which includes his own Senatorial election.
A letter was sent to Republican Gov. Scott by the two groups, the League of Women Voters and Common Cause.
The letter threatens Scott with a “formal emergency remedy” if he doesn’t comply with their demands, saying:
“Please issue a public statement that you will recuse yourself and remove yourself from any oversight of the 2018 election immediately or we will have no choice but to seek a formal emergency remedy from the courts.”
According to Breitbart, the letter claims Scott “intentionally politicized governance of the elections” when his used his position to ask the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to investigate possible irregularities in ballot offices in Southern Florida.
The League of Women Voters purports to be “nonpartisan, neither supporting nor opposing candidates or political parties at any level of government, but always working on vital issues of concern to members and the public.”
Capital Research charges the group has evidenced a “major flirtation with the Democratic Party.”
The League documents its funding from Soros’s Open Society Institute
Common Cause is also financed by Soros’s Open Society Foundations.
Its mission says it aims “to build a democracy that works for us all.”
Scott’s race against Sen. Bill Nelson is one of three elections heading for a recount in Florida after all three fell within the margin for a machine recount, and Scott’s 0.15 percent margin will likely also result in a hand recount.
Nine members of a voter fraud ring have been arrested in a #Texas border town for their role in an alleged #election rigging scheme.
READ MORE: https://t.co/m8kSznWGb9#VoterFraud— Neon Nettle (@NeonNettle) November 10, 2018
Scott’s call for an investigation came amid questions about the slow pace of Broward’s ballot counting and past wrongdoings by the county’s controversial elections supervisor, Brenda Snipes.
A judged ruled that Snipes destroyed ballots too soon from a critical 2016 Congressional race n which former Democratic National Convention (DNC) Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz won re-election.
Snipes was also ordered by a judge earlier this year to change the way she handles mail-in ballots after her office was accused of opening them in secret.
Over the weekend, the Miami Herald reported that Snipes’ office mixed 20 rejected ballots with a sampling of 205 valid provisional ones in the current election.
The discrepancy was reportedly found only after an uproar from the Republican Party resulted in the Broward County canvassing board inspecting those provisional ballots.