The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

Behind a significant portion of voting machines used in the United States lies a complex web of questionable foreign ties, a hidden ownership structure, and transparency concerns with the software itself, as well as a connection between three key voting systems companies: Smartmatic, Sequoia Voting Systems, and Dominion Voting Systems.

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

The Arizona Supreme Court agreed Monday to hear an election challenge brought by the state’s Republican Party Chair Kelli Ward concerning mail-in ballots in Maricopa County. A lower court judge dismissed her case Friday, but she took the challenge to the state’s highest court and has said a small sample of ballots and envelopes she was able to inspect showed some irregularities.

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

A ruling last week from the 11th Circuit court challenges the inevitability thesis. Not only does Grant’s decision create what’s called “a conflict in the circuits,” making it all the more probable that the Supreme Court will have to consider the issue, there is an implicit lesson for anyone tempted by the inevitability thesis.

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

The constitutional process must be allowed to continue. We are going to defend the honesty of the vote by ensuring every legal ballot is counted and that no illegal ballot is counted. This is not just about honoring the votes of 74 million Americans who voted for me; it's about ensuring that Americans can have faith in this election and all future elections," he continued.

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

“We are clawing our Electoral College votes back, we will not release them,” Finchem said. “That’s what I’m calling on our colleagues in both the House and Senate to do—exercise our plenary authority under the U.S. Constitution. “There is a legal brief out there that says we are not tethered to state statute when it comes to this one question.”

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

In a series of now-deleted social media posts, archives of which have been obtained by The Gateway Pundit, the Nevada Native Vote Project is seen clearly exchanging gift cards in exchange for people’s ballots. The group cannot claim that they were providing gas to go vote, as they were exchanging ballots for the gift cards right there.

The Daily Brief

The Daily Brief

In a victory for the pro-life movement, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld two states’ bans on Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood Monday. The Fifth Circuit, based in New Orleans, Louisiana, ruled en banc Monday that Texas and Louisiana can cut off Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood, concluding that federal law “does not give Medicaid patients the right to challenge a State’s determination that a particular Medicaid provider is unqualified.”