WATCH LIVE: Pinal County Board Of Supervisors To Discuss Handling Of Election After Recount Discovers Hundreds Of New Votes For Abe Hamadeh

The Pinal County Board of Supervisors will hold a Regular Session Board Meeting today at 9:30 am MST, where they will discuss the handling of the 2022 Pinal County election and hear public comment on the election.

Item number one on the agenda for today’s meeting is a “Discussion regarding the 2022 Pinal County Primary and General Election handling, follow up by staff, After-Action Report and Administrative Review, process and issues moving forward for the 2022 General Election and follow up. (Kent Volkmer/Geraldine Roll/Himanshu Patel)”

View the full meeting agenda here.

The Supervisors will likely discuss the Pinal County 2022 Primary Election disaster, where the County ran out of Republican Ballots.

Before the Primary Election on August 2nd, the elections department also sent 63,000 incorrect ballots to Pinal County voters.

They will also likely discuss the recount in the Attorney General’s race that discovered hundreds of new votes for Abe Hamadeh and brought the margin to just 280 votes.

Katie Hobbs failed as Secretary of State to ensure these election issues did not occur.

As The Gateway Pundit reported, Hamadeh filed a ‘Motion for New Trial’ in the Mohave County Superior Court Tuesday after the recount of votes in Pinal County discovered what he called “shocking revelations.”

BREAKING: Internal Source Says “Significant Miscount” In Abe Hamadeh’s Recount Nets Hamadeh With Hundreds of New Votes In Race Called by 511 Votes

Abe’s race against radical leftist Kris Mayes was initially called by just 511 out of over 2.5 million votes. However, as The Gateway Pundit reported, a miscount of votes in rural Pinal County discovered hundreds of new votes for Hamadeh.

Pinal County must take action to correct the election statewide.

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Jordan Conradson, formerly TGP’s Arizona correspondent, is currently on assignment in Washington DC. Jordan has played a critical role in exposing fraud and corruption in Arizona's elections and elected officials. His reporting on election crimes in Maricopa County led to the resignation of one election official, and he was later banned from the Maricopa County press room for his courage in pursuit of the truth. TGP and Jordan finally gained access after suing Maricopa County, America's fourth largest county, and winning at the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. Conradson looks forward to bringing his aggressive style of journalism to the Swamp.

You can email Jordan Conradson here, and read more of Jordan Conradson's articles here.

 

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