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FLASHBACK: MTG's husband was stopped from voting in Georgia's 2020 presidential election after officials said he already voted absentee—he didn't

"We saw a tremendous amount of voter fraud. " Greene testified in 2022.

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"We saw a tremendous amount of voter fraud. " Greene testified in 2022.

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Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R) testified under oath last year that in the 2020 election, her husband had received an absentee ballot after not requesting one. When Greene's husband arrived at the polls in person, he was told that he had already voted.

At the time of the election, allegations that Greene had made false claims about her husband, Perry Greene, surfaced after she posted about her husband being told he already voted in Georgia.



Later information then revealed she was accurate in her account regarding her husband.  

As former President Donald Trump has been facing his fourth indictment for what the indictment alleges as "falsely claimed voter fraud" and other conspiracies, Greene still believes the American people should get behind him.

She has posted her support for Trump in light of the indictment, saying, “The quickest way for Republican leaders to lose my support currently and for any of their future political endeavors is by standing on the same side as communist thugs weaponizing their political power to take down President Trump.” 



One example given in the case against Trump for claiming false voter fraud is that he "tweeted from the Twitter account @RealDonaldTrump, 'We now have far more votes than needed to flip Georgia in the Presidential race. Massive VOTER FRAUD took place. Thank you to the Georgia Legislature for today's revealing meeting!'"  



The lawsuit called this tweet an "overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy" to overturn the Georgia election.  

Greene testified on her husband's case in 2022 during a hearing that challenged her candidacy for office. Due to the 14th Amendment, the election of anyone involved in “insurrection or rebellion" against the United States government is prohibited. 

"We saw a tremendous amount of voter fraud. We have investigations going on right now in Georgia," Greene testified. “There is investigation going on in multiple states. My husband showed up to vote and when he went to vote he went to vote in person, he was told he had already voted by absentee ballot when, in fact, he had never requested an absentee ballot." 

Instead of requesting a ballot, it was discovered after further investigation that Greene's husband had only sent in a "Cancel Ballot Affidavit," with an attached note indicating he did not request a ballot in the first place.  

The question of Trump's understanding of the amount of voter fraud taking place in the state of Georgia may implicate what charges Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis will be able to convict Trump on in court.  

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Comments

Dean

Yep, no voting irregularities going on in Georgia. No siree, Just ask the officials in Fulton County who were involved in the voting irregularities. They'll deny it, so it must true. Just look at the vote count video. Nothing to see here. They deny that happened as well. Nothing to see here. Move along.

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