2024 Presidential Election

Texas attorney general sues county for trying to mail registration forms to unregistered voters

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit Wednesday trying to stop one of the biggest counties in Texas from mailing voter registration forms to large swaths of unregistered voters.

On Tuesday, the county judge and commissioners in Bexar County, which includes San Antonio, approved a contract with a vendor to mail the unsolicited forms to approximately 210,000 people, with the goal of registering about 75,000 voters.


Paxton, a Republican, had previously warned of legal action if Bexar County moved forward with its plan to work with the vendor, Civic Government Solutions. In the new complaint, Paxton argues that it’s illegal for county officials to arrange for unsolicited, mass mailing of voter registration forms.

“Despite being warned against adopting this blatantly illegal program that would spend taxpayer dollars to mail registration applications to potentially ineligible voters, Bexar County has irresponsibly chosen to violate the law,” Paxton said in a statement announcing the filing.

Paxton’s lawsuit is the latest step in a large-scale effort by Republican leaders in Texas against largely Democratic cities that are trying to make voting easier and more accessible. Paxton’s office also launched an election integrity unit in 2018 investigating allegations of voter fraud, but the unit has yielded few convictions.


Civic Government Solutions is run by a known progressive activist, Jeremy Smith, but Smith sought to reassure county leaders on Tuesday that his company is strictly nonpartisan, saying it’s in the company’s financial interest to register as many voters as possible on both sides of the aisle.

“I understand where people are coming from,” Smith said at the meeting, responding to questions about his background. “I have a personal view on who I would like to win the federal election. That is not to say that the contracts that we undertake with governments are in any way partisan.”

Commissioners and the county judge brought up concerns about Smith’s partisan ties, as well as Paxton’s legal threats multiple times at a meeting on Tuesday but ultimately decided to approve the contract, citing a need to make it easier for new residents in the county to sign up to vote.


The county judge, who is a Democrat, and two Democratic commissioners approved the contract. A third Democratic commissioner abstained from voting, and a fourth commissioner, the lone Republican, voted against it.

Several residents showed up to the meeting and voiced stark opposition to the initiative, alleging that the mostly Democratic body of commissioners was trying to register more Democrats and non-citizens.

Commissioner Justin Rodriguez, a Democrat, has led the effort to work with CGS and sharply pushed back on the accusations.

“From my perspective, this is about democracy with a lowercase ‘d’ and making sure that people have access,” he said. “I’m getting texts as recent as last week from people who say, look, we just moved into the county. We don’t understand the process.”

Reached for comment after the lawsuit was announced, county leaders indicated they still plan to move forward with the registration effort. In a statement, Bexar County Judge Peter Sakai said he and the commissioners sought their own legal opinion and feel the county still has the right to mail out registration forms.


“We are confident we can defend that position, if needed, in a court of law,” Sakai said in the statement. He added there are “robust safeguards” to vet all applicants and prevent any non-eligible residents from becoming registered voters, even if they receive a form in the mail.

“Bexar County’s nonpartisan effort to provide voter registration applications to targeted eligible citizens is within the authority of the County and consistent with State law,” he said.
 

Colorado Paper Hits Back at Venezuela Gang Claims echoed by Trump: 'Enough'


An op-ed in a Colorado newspaper hit back at what it called "Venezuelan gang hysteria perpetrated by dodgy politicians."

Former President Donald Trump and local politicians, including Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman, recently said that apartment buildings in the city of Aurora had been taken over by migrants. Last Thursday, a video reportedly showing armed members of a Venezuelan gang inside an apartment complex circulated on social media.

The clip shows a group armed with rifles and handguns inside The Edge at Lowry apartments in Aurora, Fox31 in Denver reported. It was captured shortly before a shooting at the complex that left one person seriously injured, the owner of the video said.

Multiple politicians have since called out "Venezuelan gang activity," which the newspaper The Sentinel called a "grisly attempt at terrorizing Aurora residents, in hopes of swaying voters to back anti-immigrant candidates and causes."

Dave Perry, senior editor , wrote: "Enough. Aurora residents have had enough of their community and some of the most vulnerable people among us being made dangerously into pawns for a despicable right-wing political farce."


He went on to call out "some city and regional Republican lawmakers" by name, including Aurora Councilmember Danielle Jurinsky and Coffman. Perry said they "owe Aurora, the state and the nation an apology for purposely generating terror in a foul and blatant grab for political gain."

Jurinsky told Fox 31: "The city nonprofits have lined up to help the migrants that have come here but nobody is helping the Americans that are trapped in these apartment complexes. This isn't just Americans. Other Venezuelans are being extorted by this gang."

Meanwhile, Coffman wrote in a post on Facebook that the city was waiting for a municipal judge to issue a court order, which would return control to property owners.

"The problems associated with Venezuelan gang activity has been isolated to properties that are all under the same out-of-state ownership whose problems with code violations and criminal activity preceded the migrant crisis," Coffman said.


"I strongly believe that the best course of action is to shut these buildings down and make sure that this never happens again."

Last Friday, Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, said during a rally in Pennsylvania: "These stupid people that we have leading our country are allowing these people, these criminals to come into our country, and we've got to get them the hell out of here."

Perry said of these types of comments: "They point to national immigration policy problems as the reason why this city council, and just about every city council before them, has been unable to control shootings and address poverty not just in these neighborhoods, but across the city.

"Don't buy it, Aurora. It's a demented and dangerous deception that is only meant to invoke fear and turn voters toward a failed political clan of liars, cheaters and election deniers practically driven from the entire state."


When asked for a response to the op-ed, Steven Cheung, a spokesman for Trump, told Newsweek: "President Trump speaks truth to power and he will always shine a spotlight on crime that has been allowed to pour into our communities due to Kamala Harris and Joe Biden's anti-America policies."

Newsweek has also contacted Jurinsky via email and Coffman via the City of Aurora's email for comment.

Although law enforcement has not verified the claims that the apartment in the viral video has been taken over by the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua (TdA), police said they had set up a special task force to address concerns about the gang members and other criminal activity linked to migrants in the area.

"We are aware that components of TdA are operating in Aurora. APD has been increasingly collecting evidence to show the gang is connected to crimes in the area," the Aurora Police Department said.

The TdA began as a prison gang in Aragua, Venezuela, before expanding rapidly in recent years, according to the U.S. Department of State, focusing on human trafficking and other abuses.

Aurora PD said it believed the influence of TdA was isolated to the buildings in question, adding that it was working with federal and state partners, including the DEA.
 

'Useful idiots': Conservative hammers MAGA influencers for taking Kremlin cash


A conservative pundit Thursday laid into the "useful idiots" who prosecutors contend unwittingly accepted millions of dollars from Russian operatives to spread secret propaganda for a hostile foreign power.

Jim Geraghty, senior political correspondent for the conservative magazine National Review, lacerated conservative commentators Tim Pool and Benny Johnson for their apparent inclusion in Attorney General Merrick Garland's indictment of two Russian nationals on money laundering and Foreign Agents Restriction Act charges.


Although the indictment says that Pool and Johnson had no knowledge that the money they were receiving came from Russia, Geraghty says that doesn't get them off the hook from an ethical perspective.

"If someone whom you have never met and never heard of, and who has no online paper trail at all — someone who you cannot prove actually exists — offers to pay you a monthly fee of $400,000 to make one video a week, there are two ways to react" Geraghty wrote. "One is to emulate Steve Miller and take the money and run. The other is to wonder just who the hell would pay that much money for that little work, and to smell a rat."

The scheme, as outlined in the Justice department indictment against Kostiantyn Kalashnikov and Elena Afanasyeva, saw Tennessee-based Tenet Media, owned by right-wing influencer Lauren Chen and husband Liam Donovan, funneling cash into the company through a non-existent donor named “Eduard Grigoriann," prosecutors contend.


Neither Tenet Media founders nor its commentators have been charged with crimes.

But they earned scorn from the National Review contributor who noted only one commentator appears to have expressed curiosity about a mysterious backer with no web presence whatsoever.

"The Russians sent Commentator-1 an entirely fabricated profile with biographical information, claiming that 'Eduard Grigoriann' had graduated cum laude with a 'Bachelor’s degree in Economics and Management,' had worked in Belgium, Singapore, and France, had managed risk analysis and international relations, been an investment manager, formed his own private-equity firm . . . and he had somehow done all this without leaving any digital footprint anywhere," wrote Geraghty.

"Something about this did stink to Commentator-1; he said he was worried about the profile of 'Eduard Grigoriann' because 'Grigoriann' advocated for 'social justice' causes."


Geraghty also quotes at length commentary from Pool that he sarcastically dubs "subtle" and in which he finds a glaring factual error: The date of a pipeline explosion Pool claims triggered Russia's invasion but that occurred months after the conflict began.

"Ukraine is our enemy! Being funded by the Democrats!" Pool told viewers. "Ukraine is the greatest threat to this nation, and the world! We should rescind all funding and financing, pull out all military support, and we should apologize to Russia."

Pool Wednesday night took to X to claim full editorial control, make note of his apolitical content, call Russian President Vladimir Putin a "scumbag" and hurl a vulgar insult at the nation as a whole.


Johnson said in another statement, “We are disturbed by the allegations in today’s indictment, which make clear that myself and other influencers were victims in this alleged scheme."

Replied Geraghty, "Yeah, he should be disturbed."

Geraghty contends that the pair may well have been misled and does not call for any legal action. Mockery is another issue.

"Everything at Tenet Media must have seemed perfectly normal to them, because Europe is full of Belgian private-equity-fund managers who want to spend millions of dollars a year on light-work gigs for right-wing social-media influencers," Geraghty snarked. "Did you know the word 'gullible' is not in the dictionary?"

Why? For Geraghty, it's a question of freedom of speech.

"If you want to say that Vladimir Putin is swell, that the Russian regime is a defender of Christianity and traditional values, that U.S. aid to Ukraine’s defense is a waste, and that borscht is better than apple pie, well then, the Constitution protects your right to say those things," Geragthy concluded. "But when you start getting giant piles of Kremlin money to make those arguments . . . there really ought to be reputational consequences."
 
This guy already dragging Trump down in NC and now this bombshell

Rep. Byron Donalds didn't properly disclose up to $1.6 million in stock trades, violating federal law

Rep. Byron Donalds failed to properly disclose two years' worth of his and his wife's stock trades.
  • It was up to $1.6 million, including stock in companies he oversees on a House committee.
  • Donalds has previously spoken out in favor of banning lawmakers from trading stocks.
Republican Rep. Byron Donalds, the Florida congressman who was in the running to be former President Donald Trump's vice presidential pick, is in some hot water over his stock trades.


Donalds and his wife made over 100 trades, valued between $108,000 and $1.6 million, over the course of 2022 and 2023.

Though he disclosed those trades in annual forms filed in August 2023 and August 2024, he did not file any periodic transaction reports over those two years, which lawmakers are required to file within 45 days of trading any stock in order to ensure the public is aware of lawmakers' financial dealings in real time.

Failing to file those reports constitutes a clear violation of the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act, a law designed to prevent insider trading that requires regular disclosure of stock trades.

The Campaign Legal Center, a liberal-leaning ethics watchdog, filed a complaint with the Office of Congressional Ethics on Thursday calling for a probe into whether Donalds' failure to disclose the trades "was an attempt to avoid public scrutiny of potential conflicts of interest."


A spokesperson for Donalds did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

According to the congressman's disclosures, the stocks were held in a retirement account associated with Donalds' former employer, Moran Wealth Management, a firm based in Naples, Florida. It's possible that the trades were made by someone other than Donalds, as is sometimes the case with other lawmakers, though he is still legally responsible for disclosing those trades.

Donalds also supports banning lawmakers from trading stocks, making his violation of the law all the more notable.

In March 2022, when asked about Business Insider's reporting that dozens of lawmakers and staffers had failed to disclose their stock trades in a timely fashion, Donalds said, "That's when you have to have sanctions, and the House has to get real."

Campaign Legal argued that because Donalds appeared to be aware of the STOCK Act's requirements — as many lawmakers often are not — there's reason to believe he intentionally did not disclose the trades.


The group pointed to the fact that Donalds, a member of the House Financial Service Committee, traded stock in companies that the committee oversees, including Elevance Health and JPMorgan Chase.

In 2022, after the Office of Congressional Ethics found that there was "reason to believe" three lawmakers violated the STOCK Act, the House Ethics Committee let them off the hook, ruling that the trio appeared to be unaware of the requirements of the law.
 
Ohh look ...a week ago and Elon boosting this nonsense from what turns out to be

....checks notes

A Kremlin funded operation ongoing in the US to interfere in the 2024 election and spread Russian propaganda that was just busted by the FBI

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Marco Rubio downplays Russia paying prominent rightwing influencers because "we're talking about preexisting political opinions in the United States ... they legitimately believe in the views they're espousing. They were victims."
 
Marco Rubio downplays Russia paying prominent rightwing influencers because "we're talking about preexisting political opinions in the United States ... they legitimately believe in the views they're espousing. They were victims."

Nothing To See Here GIF by Giphy QA
 
So now the Great Depression was done intention...wow


Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) claims, without evidence, that the Great Depression was an inside job.

"The Great Depression was pretty well planned ... I know it really sounds like conspiracy theory. I don't completely understand it, but I just feel it in my bones..."

 
White House spokesman Andrew Bates on MSNBC on Trump saying he wants to lower child care costs with tariffs: "If you have any idea what the hell that answer means, you are a better detective than I am."
 
So now the Great Depression was done intention...wow


Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) claims, without evidence, that the Great Depression was an inside job.

"The Great Depression was pretty well planned ... I know it really sounds like conspiracy theory. I don't completely understand it, but I just feel it in my bones..."


Season 4 What GIF by The Office


Warren G. Harding.(R)
Calvin Coolidge (R)
Herbert Hoover (R)
 
The Colorado Republican Party’s Director of Special Initiatives responds to concerns about white supremacist violence against migrants, saying: “Ha. Racism. Then leave.”

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DOJ: Russia Aimed Propaganda at Gamers, Minorities to Swing 2024 Election

Newly unsealed court documents reveal in unprecedented detail a campaign called the Good Old USA Project, which Russian authorities believed could impact the US election.

 
The media company alleged to have been part of a Russian election interference plot featured interviews with prominent Republicans such as a daughter-in-law of former President Donald Trump, one of Trump's lawyers and a member of Congress.
Lara Trump
Rep. Brian Mast
Kash Patel
Kari Lake
Vivek Ramaswamy
Tulsi Gabbard
Tenet Media paid as much as $100k/episode

 
The media company alleged to have been part of a Russian election interference plot featured interviews with prominent Republicans such as a daughter-in-law of former President Donald Trump, one of Trump's lawyers and a member of Congress.
Lara Trump
Rep. Brian Mast
Kash Patel
Kari Lake
Vivek Ramaswamy
Tulsi Gabbard
Tenet Media paid as much as $100k/episode

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