Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Problem with New Election Equipment Delays Voting in GA Counties


A glitch with Georgia’s New Voter Check-In Computers caused Delays in most of the Six Counties Testing it, causing some Precincts to Stay Open Late to Accommodate Voters who Left without Casting their Ballots.

The Problem occurred in at least Four of the Six Counties where the New Voting System was being Tested Tuesday before it’s Rolled Out Statewide to 7.4 Million Registered Voters during the March 24th Presidential Primary in 2020.

Most Georgia Voters were still using the State’s 17-year-old Voting Technology Tuesday.

Poll Workers weren’t able to Create Voter Access Cards on New Voting Check-In Computers Manufactured by KnowInk.

Those Cards Activate Touchscreen Voting Machines so that they Display the Ballot Associated with the Jurisdictions where Voters are Registered.

New Voting Machines

With the Presidential Election on the line in 2020, Georgia is Switching to a New Voting Company, Dominion Voting Systems, that State Evaluators Ranked Second-Best and that Critics said will leave Elections Vulnerable.

Dominion, based in Denver, must Rush to Install 30,000 Voting Machines for 7 Million Georgia Voters before the March 24th Presidential Primary, the Largest Rollout of Elections Equipment in U.S. history.

Voters in those Six Counties were Testing the New Dominion’s Machines.










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker


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