I think the ballot envelope has that information, but the ballot itself does not.
Once the ballot is removed from the envelope, it loses its identity.
The most likely suspect for ballot fraud among poll workers would be the person in charge of absentee ballots. They likely sit in a backroom or out of site of most people, and they are in charge of opening the envelopes and counting the ballots.
Even if the ballots were marked with an ID, this person could simply have a stack of prefilled ballots ready to go and just write the ID on each ballot before insertion into the tabulator.
Remember in 2,000 mules when they tracked the ballot mules around cities dropping off huge amounts of ballots in drop boxes?
Where did these mules always start?
They started at an NGO office where they were given the stacks of ballots. These are the prefilled ballots I am talking about.
This was how they stole 2020 with mail in ballots.
In person, early voting uses a very similar system. When you vote early, in person, in many states, you fill out your ballot like you do on election day voting, but you don't put your ballot into a tabulator machine. You put it into an envelope and hand it back to the clerk.
Everyone voting in person has their ballots sitting in a box at the clerks office just like the boxes of mail in ballots.
Who is watching the precincts right now? Who is securing our ballots right now?
All states allow voters to cross political lines during the general election. Everyone has the same ballots.
Primary elections in many states either allow cross-over voters or they let you register for the other party and change back after the election. Rep and Dem ballots are usually different because you are voting for the candidate you want to represent your party in the general.
Keep in mind though, in many states absentee ballots AND in person early ballots are not opened until election day.
There is no way to know for sure who someone voted for until the ballots envelopes are opened.
Yes if it a republican voter, it should be a republican vote, but many states allow voters to cross party lines on election day.
IMO, the cheat will occur on election day when ballot counters swap out legit ballots for fraudelent ballots and count the fraudulent ballots.
Once the ballot envelope is opened, there are no identifying marks on the ballots themselves so swapping them is easy.
This is where citizens need to watch like hawks. Don't let them swap the ballots!
IMO, this is why they hid the count room in Wayne County in 2020, as an example. They were swapping ballots.
Eh. Each ballot has an ID number. There should be something that matches the person's name to the ballot ID.
I think the ballot envelope has that information, but the ballot itself does not.
Once the ballot is removed from the envelope, it loses its identity.
The most likely suspect for ballot fraud among poll workers would be the person in charge of absentee ballots. They likely sit in a backroom or out of site of most people, and they are in charge of opening the envelopes and counting the ballots.
Even if the ballots were marked with an ID, this person could simply have a stack of prefilled ballots ready to go and just write the ID on each ballot before insertion into the tabulator.
Remember in 2,000 mules when they tracked the ballot mules around cities dropping off huge amounts of ballots in drop boxes?
Where did these mules always start?
They started at an NGO office where they were given the stacks of ballots. These are the prefilled ballots I am talking about.
This was how they stole 2020 with mail in ballots.
In person, early voting uses a very similar system. When you vote early, in person, in many states, you fill out your ballot like you do on election day voting, but you don't put your ballot into a tabulator machine. You put it into an envelope and hand it back to the clerk.
Everyone voting in person has their ballots sitting in a box at the clerks office just like the boxes of mail in ballots.
Who is watching the precincts right now? Who is securing our ballots right now?
Important questions.
All states allow voters to cross political lines during the general election. Everyone has the same ballots.
Primary elections in many states either allow cross-over voters or they let you register for the other party and change back after the election. Rep and Dem ballots are usually different because you are voting for the candidate you want to represent your party in the general.