Guest post by Jefferson Davis
WISCONSIN’S WISVOTE DATABASE EXPERIENCES MELTDOWN ON FIRST DAY OR EARLY IN-PERSON VOTING
Voters waited for up to two hours in Wisconsin to vote on Tuesday, the first day of early voting – WBAY screengrab
Madison – In what can only be described as “stupefying” by defying any sense of sensibility, thousands of personal and first-hand reports from electors across the State of Wisconsin have surfaced from the first day of Early In-Person Voting when the Wisconsin Election Commission’s (WEC) “electronic voting systems” experienced a meltdown that resulted in thousands of electors across Wisconsin being turned away or told to leave to come back another day to vote.
Personal and first-hand accounts from electors across the State of Wisconsin began to surface by mid-morning on October 22nd of extremely long lines (for hours), WisVote “system glitches”, “bandwidth shortcomings”, “issues with WEC”, “elector verification challenges”, long delays in the printing of “labels” for absentee ballots, unanswered questions and being denied the constitutional and legal right to vote.
WBAY reported: “Voters see long lines in Northeast Wisconsin on first day of early voting.”
“Due to higher-than-expected turnout for the first day of in-person absentee voting, the WisVote system that some clerks use experienced a period of slowness that has now been resolved. Clerks use WisVote to print a label that can be placed on the outside of in-person absentee certificate envelopes.
The same information can be affixed on the outside of the envelope manually with a pen.
Today’s system lag was purely related to demands on the WisVote system due to high turnout.
This should not prevent any voter’s ability to vote in-person absentee today. WEC staff worked quickly to increase system capacity to ensure that clerks can continue to facilitate in-person absentee voting efficiently.”
The post Breaking: Wisconsin Voting System Experiences Meltdown on Day 1 of Early In-Person Voting – HOURS-LONG Wait to Cast Ballots – VOTERS OUTRAGED! appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.