But no, now they are giving receipts to people. So the gold standard is giving a receipt showing ID and having multiple weeks to do it. And so if anybody's taking anything away from this, there can be cheating, but it cannot swing the presidential election.View on YouTube
Based on evidence available after the November 5, 2024 U.S. presidential election, Jason’s prediction matches what is known.
Joe Biden won the 2024 election, securing more than the 270 Electoral College votes needed for victory; major outlets projected his win and finalized state-level results confirmed his Electoral College majority.
Multiple lines of evidence indicate that while some instances of irregularities, errors, or isolated fraud are always possible in U.S. elections, there is no credible evidence of fraud or cheating on a scale that would overturn the national result in the Electoral College:
- State certifications and recounts – All states certified their results following their usual canvass, audit, and (where applicable) recount procedures. No state reported evidence of systemic fraud sufficient to change its presidential outcome.
- Courts and legal challenges – Post-election lawsuits and challenges did not produce findings of widespread fraud capable of changing who won key battleground states, let alone the Electoral College overall. Courts consistently rejected claims that would imply large-scale outcome-changing fraud due to lack of evidence.
- Official and independent assessments – Federal and state election officials, as well as independent election experts and monitoring organizations, reported that while routine issues (administrative errors, isolated illegal votes, machine glitches, etc.) occurred, they were not large enough in magnitude or geographically coordinated enough to flip the Electoral College outcome.
Taken together, the evidence supports Jason’s claim: there can be cheating, but it cannot swing the presidential election—understood here as “there was not enough fraud or cheating in 2024 to change who won the presidency in the Electoral College.” Therefore the prediction is right.
(Note: This conclusion is based on the aggregate of official certifications, court rulings, and expert evaluations available after the 2024 election; no reputable source has produced substantiated evidence of fraud on a scale that would alter the Electoral College winner.)