News

Help us correct the Vote By Mail/Absentee ballot “equivalence” deception

Absentee ballots and universal vote by mail (“VBM”) schemes proposed by Democrats are not the same. Absentee ballots are requested by a voter and sent to that voter’s residence. With Universal VBM, the state sends applications or ballots to an address with no confirmation of recipients’ names or voting status. Even some Republican governors don’t get it. We hope you will help explain this critical difference to everyone you know.

By |2020-08-17T14:31:15+00:00August 17th, 2020|

1 in 5 Ballots Rejected as Fraud Is Charged in N.J. Mail-In Election

Following accusations of widespread fraud, voter intimidation, and ballot theft in the May 12 municipal elections in Paterson, N.J., state Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal (pictured) announced Thursday he is charging four men with voter fraud – including the vice president of the City Council and a candidate for that body.

By |2020-08-17T14:09:53+00:00August 17th, 2020|

10th District Legislators: ‘We Must Be Able to Vote In Person’

Things for which we need ID include buying alcohol and tobacco, opening a bank account and applying for welfare programs. Three New Jersey legislators want to change current state law to require photo ID for voting, and we agree — requirements to identify yourself for your most important citizen activity should be a no-brainer. Sometimes bills pass, sometimes they don’t, but they always make a statement.

By |2020-08-12T14:41:33+00:00August 12th, 2020|

Thousands of Ineligible Persons Could be Mailed Ballots If Nevada Goes All-Mail in November Election

On July 24th, Nevada’s Election Integrity Project notified Nevada officials of grossly inaccurate voter rolls it uncovered that could undermine the integrity of the state’s election results. Its report includes 10 categories of findings with myriad problems in more than 100K records. As Nevada liberals call for mail-only elections, this group demonstrates why this would be a huge mistake and a field day for fraud.

By |2020-08-12T14:38:28+00:00August 12th, 2020|

Feds Accuse Ex-Philadelphia Congressman Michael ‘Ozzie’ Myers of Stuffing Ballots

Former Philadelphia Congressman Michael “Ozzie” Myers went to jail for political bribery and conspiracy in the 1980s and became a political consultant for fellow Democrats when he got out. Now he has been indicted for bribing an election judge and ballot stuffing in three elections starting in 2014. He allegedly took money from candidates to pay the judge to add fake votes. Vote fraud and vote fraud conspiracy wrapped up in one case.

By |2020-08-12T14:34:56+00:00August 12th, 2020|

Men Admit To Skid Row Scheme Offering $1, Cigarettes For Fraudulent Voter Registration

“Four people admitted to offering homeless people money and cigarettes in exchange for false and forged signatures on ballot petitions and voter registration forms.” Five others are awaiting trial. The slap on the wrist the confessed fraudsters received through an LA court included community service. The last place these fraudsters need to be is in the community. Vote fraud is real, and it is organized.

By |2020-08-12T14:21:02+00:00August 12th, 2020|

Nadler in 2004: ‘Paper Ballots Are Extremely Susceptible to Fraud’ – News Punch

New York Congressman Jerry Nadler in 2004: “Paper ballots are extremely susceptible to fraud. Just paper with no machines? I can show you experience which would make your head spin.” New York Congressman Jerry Nadler in 2020 (we are paraphrasing, but you get the gist): “Paper ballots now create their own paper trail.” The hypocrisy might be funny if we were not talking about voting, our most sacred right as Americans.

By |2020-08-12T14:18:17+00:00August 12th, 2020|

Sandman v. CNN is a case about fundamental freedoms

Freedom of the press is an important protection, but does not extend to the media deliberately lying and defaming to make a political point. That CNN settled the lawsuit with a young man it inaccurately maligned is an important precedent. It shows the media’s anti-pro life bias, but also that justice can prevail and reminds us that we must watch the watch dogs to ensure our rights to truth, free speech and assembly remain protected.

By |2020-07-31T19:41:04+00:00July 31st, 2020|

Police unions thwart justice in cases of true malfeasance

Unions, in general, are full of good people whose leadership is singularly power seeking and often corrupt. Police unions are no different. We honor and appreciate our law enforcement, but understand that every bushel has a few bad apples. Police unions protect the bad apples from accountability, thus throwing the good fruit under the bus. If we want to change this, we need to start protesting union bosses, not the good men and women in blue protecting our lives on a daily basis.

By |2020-07-31T19:39:08+00:00July 31st, 2020|

Report says “Conservatism is down,” but is it really?

Gallup reports that there are fewer self-identified conservatives now than there were in February. (Not at ACRU!) A July Cato Institute poll found that 62% of Americans are afraid to share their political views, including 77% of Republicans. We can all connect the dots between these two surveys. It is more important than ever for us to publicly express our shared Constitutional values as the left tries to shun and shame us into backing down.

By |2020-07-31T19:30:06+00:00July 31st, 2020|
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