And what's really important for Americans to understand is it is impossible right now, absolutely statistically impossible to swing the presidential election with fraud.View on YouTube
Public reporting on the 2024 U.S. presidential election shows Donald Trump won the Electoral College 312–226 over Kamala Harris, with clear margins in all seven major swing states. The results were certified and used to inaugurate Trump for a second (non‑consecutive) term; there has been no official action suggesting the certified national outcome was overturned or invalidated due to fraud. (en.wikipedia.org)
Post‑election audits and investigations have identified only small numbers of irregular or potentially fraudulent votes, far too few to change state outcomes, let alone the national Electoral College result. For example, Wisconsin’s large post‑election audit found no evidence of tampering or machine error and confirmed Trump’s roughly 29,000‑vote win there, with only a handful of minor human errors detected. (apnews.com) Wisconsin officials separately reported 127 suspected fraud/irregularity referrals statewide between 2024 and 2025, only 46 tied to the presidential race—about 0.002% of more than 3.4 million ballots cast. (apnews.com) In Iowa, a review found 35 non‑citizens voted out of over 1.6 million ballots—again, an amount that is numerically negligible relative to statewide or national margins. (apnews.com)
Independent watchdogs and fact‑checkers likewise report no evidence of widespread or outcome‑changing fraud in the 2024 election. Common Cause and experts cited in major fact‑checks state there is no evidence that votes “disappeared,” that the election was “hacked,” or that any malicious activity had a material effect on election integrity; observed issues are described as isolated machine or human errors that existing procedures corrected. (aljazeera.com) Given the certified Electoral College result and the very small scale of documented irregularities relative to margins of victory, the core prediction—that voter or election fraud would not be large enough to alter the national presidential outcome—has, based on available public evidence, proven accurate.