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- Unsubstantiated election fraud claims resurface after S. Korea president . . .
Impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has defended his failed martial law bid by rehashing baseless claims of voter fraud, which has triggered a fresh wave of misinformation online
- Flawed research into election fraud can undermine democracy and . . .
Bad electoral science can cause lasting harm to democracy, undermining public confidence in the voting process That’s the main finding from our study published in the peer-reviewed journal
- Were The April Parliamentary Elections In South Korea Rigged And . . .
Rep Min Kyung-wook of the UFP openly charged the election was fraudulent "Once ballot boxes are opened, the machines tabulate ballots and classify them by candidate and then the result sheets
- How Election Fraud Theories in South Korea Split Conservatives
On January 15, President Yoon wrote on social media, "There is overwhelming evidence of election fraud," citing three key points: Fake ballots were discovered The election commission's digital system was vulnerable to hacking and manipulation, yet no corrective action was taken
- Election Commission Not allowed to vote or manipulate votes . . .
The National Election Commission has repeatedly dismissed the so-called "suspected election fraud," which has been repeatedly raised by some since Yoon Suk Yeol's presidential statement
- Election rigging campaigners did not win a single . . . - The Korea Herald
There have been 182 complaints filed against the National Election Commission making allegations of election rigging during the legislative and presidential elections since 2020, according
- [News Today] ALLEGED ELECTION FRAUD DISMISSED - KBS 뉴스
After a two year long trial during which some 120-thousand ballot papers were double checked, the Supreme Court ruled that the election was not rigged Of the 126 lawsuits on election fraud filed in the aftermath of the 21st general election, no court ruling acknowledged fraudulent activity
- South Korea’s election commission refutes claims of advance voting . . .
South Korea’s National Election Commission dismissed the allegations as unfounded later on April 7, stating the video depicts a normal process where ballots are received by mail and inserted into ballot boxes with oversight from party-nominated officials
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