The Other McCain

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Election Fraud: Democrat Firm Identified as Source of Suspicious Voter Registration Forms in Four Pennsylvania Counties

Posted on | November 2, 2024 | No Comments

Francisco Heredia

Before we get to the connection between this Pennsylvania story and Arizona politician Francisco Heredia, let me first bring you up-to-date on how the story unfolded over the past several days:

Lancaster County District Attorney Heather Adams provided an update on Wednesday on her office’s investigation of approximately 2,500 fraudulent voter registration applications.
Adams said Lancaster County Detectives are continuing to review suspected fraudulent applications to determine who participated in completing and providing the fraudulent applications. . . .
Adams said her office believes that the fraudulent voter registrations are connected to large-scale canvassing operations for voter registrations dating back to June.
Election workers noticed irregularities while preparing to process the applications and immediately notified Adams’ office.
At a press conference held last week with the Elections Board, Adams announced that her investigators immediately found indicators of fraud, including incorrect and non-existent addresses, false personal identification information, as well as false names and incorrect social security information.
In other cases, Adams said, applications contained accurate voter identification information, but the application was determined to be forged.
Lancaster County Detectives worked through the weekend to review applications that were suspicious or unable to be confirmed by the voter registration office, Adams said.
In addition to finding hundreds of fraudulent voter applications, hundreds more were unable to be verified by detectives, meaning that none of the identification information provided on the application was able to be located (in any police or public source databases) and therefore unable to be verified.

In addition to Lancaster County, similar bogus registration forms were reported in York, Monroe and Berks counties. These were not, as some mistakenly said, fake ballots, but rather voter registration forms which county officials detected as suspicious. Of course, when Donald Trump posted a social media rant about it, all the liberal news media jumped up to accuse him of spreading “misinformation.

OK, but . . . here’s the real issue: We only know about these fraudulent registration forms because county officials caught them. Do you think election officials in Philadelphia are as scrupulous in processing registrations? If thousands of bogus applications were filed in Philadelphia, would officials catch them? Would the Philadelphia DA hold a press conference to announce an investigation? Doubtful. So while we know about dubious registration forms in four Republican-leaning counties, we’ve got no idea how many fake voters there might be on the rolls in Philadelphia, but I’ve got a hunch the number isn’t a small one.

Now, for the connection to Francisco Heredia:

An Arizona-based consulting firm that has taken a considerable amount of cash from national Democrats is under investigation for allegedly submitting fraudulent voter registration forms in Pennsylvania.
The Monroe County Board of Elections in Pennsylvania determined that several voter registration applications and mail-in ballot requests are fraudulent because they were not authorized by the people named on the documents, with at least one of the individuals in question being deceased, District Attorney Mike Mancuso announced on Wednesday. A subsidiary of FieldCorps, an Arizona-based consulting firm, was responsible for submitting the forms in question, according to Mancuso. FieldCorps has received hundreds of thousands of dollars from Democratic political committees since 2018 for work such as get-out-the-vote operations and canvassing services, campaign finance records show.
Among the political organizations that paid out a total of roughly $430,000 to FieldCorps since 2018 are the Arizona Democratic Party, Mike Bloomberg’s 2020 presidential campaign and Democratic Arizona Rep. Greg Stanton, according to campaign finance filings.
York County, also located in Pennsylvania, is investigating forms submitted by the FieldCorps subsidiary, Greg Monskie, the county’s chief clerk, confirmed to the Daily Caller News Foundation. He disclosed that the forms were submitted on behalf of the Everybody Votes campaign. Of the 3,087 ballots the county received as part of a bulk delivery, only 47% were verified as legitimate, with the remainder either having incomplete information or being declined pending further review, according to a county press release.
The Everybody Votes campaign is a national left-of-center voter registration operation that received tens of millions in funding from the Soros family’s philanthropy network and Arabella Advisors‘ Democratic-aligned dark money network, according to public records. The organization focuses on turning out demographics that tend to support the Democratic Party. Everybody Votes did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.
Lancaster County, again in Pennsylvania, is also investigating potentially fraudulent registration materials from a “third-party organization” after receiving approximately 2,500 applications in two waves, Fox News Digital reported. It is unclear if FieldCorps submitted these materials as well.
FieldCorps’ ties to liberal organizations go even deeper.
The firm is owned by Francisco Heredia, a longtime progressive activist. Heredia, currently the vice mayor of Mesa, Arizona, was previously the national field director of Mi Familia Vota, a group that supports amnesty for illegal immigrants and opposes former President Donald Trump. Mi Familia Vota, like Everybody Votes, has also received funding from the Soros family and the Arabella Advisors network. Heredia has endorsed Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego in Arizona’s upcoming Senate election as well.

So, non-profits funded by Soros hire a consulting firm owned by “a longtime progressive activist” to register voters in Pennsylvania and — just coincidentally — thousands of those registrations turn out to be fraudulent. But if you dare say Democrats are trying to steal the election, why, you’re a right-wing conspiracy theorist spreading misinformation!

Something nobody ever seems to ask: Whence this recent mania about the urgent need to register new voters? Why are tax-exempt “philanthropic” organizations spending money on such efforts. It’s not difficult to register to vote. Most people get registered automatically when they sign up for their driver’s license, but otherwise, anybody can do a quick Google search to locate the county election office and go fill out a registration form. Doesn’t cost anything, and only takes a few minutes. And yet, for some reason, you have these organizations running around doing these voter-registration drives — for whom? Who are all these would-be voters who can’t be bothered to go down to the county courthouse or whevever local voter registration normally takes place?

Never an explanation for this, because nobody even asks. We’re just supposed to take it for granted that there are all these people out there who want to vote, but for some reason, never registered to vote. And therefore George Soros pours out money like water to pay for voter registration projects that seem to be registering “voters” who don’t actually exist. But there’s nothing suspicious about this.



 

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