Rep. Russ Diamond, a Republican, is credited with making the discovery and going public with it. In a nutshell, he found that the total number of registered votes cast in Pennsylvania was more than 200,000 beyond the total number of people who actually voted.
Rep. Diamond and his colleagues performed an extensive analysis of the election day data, revealing what news reports describe as "troubling discrepancies" between the official vote count totals and the number of people who legitimately voted.
What this means, of course, is that Sec. of the Commonwealth Kathy Boockvar and Gov. Tom Wolf are both guilty of overseeing and certifying a fraudulent election – a serious crime, it is important to stress.
Official county election results as recorded by the Department of State (DoS) show 6,962,607 total ballots cast on Nov. 3. However, the DoS / SURE (Statewide Uniform Registry of Electors) system shows that only 6,760,230 total voters actually voted in the state's general election.
"Among the 6,962,607 total ballots cast, 6,931,060 total votes were counted in the presidential race, including all three candidates on the ballot and write-in candidates," reports indicate.
"The difference of 202,377 more votes cast than voters voting, together with the 31,547 over- and under-votes in the presidential race, adds up to an alarming discrepancy of 170,830 votes, which is more than twice the reported statewide difference between the two major candidates for President of the United States.
Even so, Sec. Boockvar certified these fraudulent results on Nov. 24. Gov. Wolf then issued a certificate of ascertainment of president electors, indicating that Biden supposedly received 80,555 more votes that Trump in the state of Pennsylvania.
In a letter, Rep. Diamond and his colleagues explained that they were already concerned with how the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania undermined the state's election code by elimination signature verification, postmarks and due dates "while allowing the proliferation of drop boxes with questionable security measures and the unauthorized curing of ballots, as well as the questionable treatment of poll watchers, all of which created wholesale opportunities for irregularities in the 2020 presidential election."
"However, we are now seeing discrepancies on the retail level which raise even more troubling questions regarding irregularities in the election returns," they added. "These findings call into question the accuracy of the SURE system, consistency in the application of the Pennsylvania Election Code from county to county, and the competency of those charged with oversight of elections in our Commonwealth."
All in all, the numbers do not add up in Pennsylvania. This means the "alleged certification" of Pennsylvania's presidential election results was "absolutely premature, unconfirmed, and in error."
President Trump took notice of the announcement, tweeting about it on Dec. 28. The roughly 205,000 fraudulent votes, if removed from the count, "flips the state to President Trump," he wrote.
As we reported back in November, Trump did, and hopefully will, win Pennsylvania once the dust settles.
"This makes it an easy call for the Pennsylvania legislature," wrote one commenter at The Gateway Pundit about the revelations. "Vote Trump."
Another commenter noted that Vice President Mike Pence now has the power to toss all Electoral College votes come Jan. 6. The question is: Will he actually follow through with it, or will he betray the president?
More of the latest news about 2020 election fraud can be found at Trump.news.
You can also support attorney Sidney Powell's efforts to fix the election fraud situation by visiting her website.
Sources for this article include: