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Wednesday, March 8, 2023

Maggie Toulouse-Oliver Used Illegal Software to Combine Election Results

Above, Secretary of State Maggie Loulouse-Oliver.

George Soros-backed New Mexico Secretary of State Maggie Loulouse-Oliver appears to have used illegal software to combine election results and tried to cover it up, according to an article in the Gateway Pundit.

According to the article:

As the Democrat-controlled New Mexico legislature barrels ahead with legislation that would put the nail in the coffin of honesty and transparency in New Mexico’s elections, the corruption of the Secretary of State (SOS), Maggie Toulouse Oliver, continues to be exposed.

After hearing public testimony during a November Torrance County public meeting, the Estancia News has done a deep dive on how election results in New Mexico are finalized, or “canvassed.”  It turns out the SOS has illegally centralized this process, cutting out the clerks, and breaking multiple state and federal laws in the process.

This series of articles will outline the framework put in place by Toulouse-Oliver and corrupt Senator Daniel Ivey-Soto that could be the mechanism used to illegally undermine elections in New Mexico. 

WHAT DOES NEW MEXICO LAW SAY ABOUT REQUIRING COUNTY CLERKS–NOT THE SOS–TO PERFORM ELECTION CANVASSES?

During the canvass, each of the county clerks are to create a “report of the canvass” which gives detailed election results by ballot type and precinct for all the races on the ballot.  State law explicitly states that the canvass report is the sole responsibility of the county clerk: “The county clerk shall:  prepare the report of the canvass of the election returns by carefully examining the returns of each precinct to ascertain if they contain the properly executed certificates required by the Election Code and to ascertain whether any discrepancy, omission or error appears on the face of the election returns.” (NMSA 1-2-31.F). 

Next, the County Commission must review the canvass report and other election documents and accept them if they find no errors, thus certifying the election in the county.  Only after this process has been completed within the county are the canvass reports to be sent up to the SOS for the completion of the state canvass, which combines the individual county’s canvass reports into the official election results for the state.

 To read more, go here.

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