HERE WE GO: ABC News Explains Why a “Red Mirage” Will Occur Today

Here we go...

The steal is on.

ABC News explained why a "Red Mirage" will occur Tuesday on Election Day.

"[Republican candidates'] leads will dwindle, or crumble completely, after perceived "dumps" of votes are recorded by state election officials who count mail-in and absentee ballots in the days - or even weeks - following Election Day." ABC News said.

ABC News revealed which states the Democrats are going to steal with post-Election Day ballot counting.

"[The Red Mirage is] likely to occur in some of the same states where the phenomenon presented itself last cycle - in states like Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin - battleground states that also happen to feature some of the most hotly-contested races of the election season." ABC News said.

We've seen this before.

A Democrat data firm warned of a "Red Mirage" shortly before the 2020 election.

The Democrats got away with the steal in 2020 so they're doing it again.

ABC News reported:

As early Election Day results come in on Tuesday, it will likely appear that a Republican candidates vying for any number of the federal or statewide races appear to be leading their Democratic opponents, even by large margins.

Their leads will dwindle, or crumble completely, after perceived "dumps" of votes are recorded by state election officials who count mail-in and absentee ballots in the days - or even weeks - following Election Day.

This phenomenon was popularized as the "red mirage" or the "blue shift" after the 2020 presidential election, when former President Donald Trump took a deceptive lead in several competitive states on Election Day due to delays in counting of Democrats' mail-in ballots - their preferred method of voting due to the COVID-19 pandemic - only to eventually dissipate when the entire reserve of votes was totaled.

Why and where might we see a ‘red mirage'

This is likely to occur again on Tuesday, according to election experts, because of the same cocktail of factors that led to a "red mirage" in 2020: Democrats have continued to use mail-in voting more than their Republican counterparts, while some of the same decisive states will take a longer time to tally their mail-in, absentee and provisional ballots due to state laws that prohibit their count until late stages in the electoral process.

And it's likely to occur in some of the same states where the phenomenon presented itself last cycle - in states like Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin - battleground states that also happen to feature some of the most hotly-contested races of the election season.

Joe Biden, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and Hillary lawyer Marc Elias all came out this week and said we won't know who won the midterm elections for days or even weeks.

via thegatewaypundit

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