The US Postal Service continues to receive ballots from Americans who choose to use remote voting. Their votes were not counted, since the winner of the presidential election was announced on Saturday.
Ballots continue to arrive in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Arizona, where Biden gained a slight lead, according to data gathered in a remote voting monitoring trial. Of these states, only Pennsylvania accepted ballots after election day if they were stamped before November 3.
According to Politico, the US Postal Service has already notified the court of its disclaimer for the failure to count the votes of thousands of Americans. Now the mail regularly sends to the court data on the activities of the department in the framework of absentee voting, since this method could be used for falsification.
While Democrats refused to acknowledge the possibility of vote-rigging, numerous experts were more skeptical. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in particular, studied the situation in the 2008 elections. Then some of the Americans also voted remotely, and 3.9 million voters did not receive their ballots; 2.9 million ballots sent out simply disappeared without being returned to election officials; another 800 thousand ballots were not accepted for various reasons.