The Election Integrity Project of California (EIPCa), an election watchdog group, joined 10 California congressional candidates in a lawsuit filed on January 4 in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, seeking to stop California’s corrupt election process.
In the lawsuit, California Governor Gavin Newsom, Secretary of State Alex Padilla, State Attorney General Xavier Becerra, and one vote for Clerk of Voters in 13 counties, including Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura, Santa Clara, and Sacramento counties, are all defendants.
In the complaint, the team representing the plaintiffs’ law firm, Primary Law Group PC and Tyler Bursch LLP, alleges that the defendants violated the Elections Clause, Equal Protection Clause, Due Process Clause and Safeguards Clause of the U.S. Constitution, thereby causing election fraud and rigging to occur in the November 2020 general election.
The suit states that the United States’ constitutional republic was founded on the sacred right of every eligible citizen to cast an equal vote as a means of determining governmental representation. Yet over the past 30 years in California, these rights have been intentionally eroded by a litany of unconstitutional statutes, regulations and executive orders. These statutes, regulations and executive orders have stacked up to create an environment in which elections can be rigged and eligible voters disenfranchised.
In particular, in 2020, Secretary of State Padilla implemented emergency regulations that removed most of the voter safeguards, which itself violated California law, even allowing multiple ballots to be stuffed into a single vote-by-mail envelope, removing valid verification of voter signatures by assuming they are valid, etc.
Not only that, but due to the failure of California and the county governments to remove ineligible voters from the voter rolls in a timely manner, California is known to have approximately one million more registered voters than eligible citizens.
On this premise, in 2020, California then implemented a policy of sending mail-in ballots to every California voter to expand the scope of mail-in ballots. The suit states that the policy has resulted in a large number of deceased, non-citizen, non-resident and other ineligible people having the opportunity to receive a ballot, which in turn may have been fraudulently cast, and the results of the election are always in question.
As a result, the lawsuit contains a call to action for an audit of California’s election process to confirm whether there was impropriety.
Long before the election, EIPCa, a nonprofit organization that is one of the plaintiffs, also discovered after an investigation that California had sent mail-in ballots to approximately 440,000 ineligible people, most of whom were deceased or had moved away from California; and that more than 20,000 voters had received multiple ballots, even from deceased 130-year-olds.
Linda Paine, the organization’s president, said that for 10 years her team has been investigating irregularities in California’s election process, while documenting and reporting election fraud to government officials. But instead of correcting fundamental flaws in the process, California officials have created more opportunities for fraud and election manipulation.
Under penalty of perjury, the public signed more than 700 affidavits attesting to election law violations, obstruction of our volunteers as observers, failure to verify ballot signatures, irregularities and fraud in the Nov. 3, 2020, election,” she said. We have no choice but to file this federal lawsuit to try to restore the integrity of the election process.
In addition to EIPCa, the lawsuit was filed by 10 California congressional candidates: 33rd District Congressional candidate James P. Bradley, 41st District Congressional candidate Aja Smith, 28th District Congressional candidate Eric Early, 15th District Alison Hayden for Congress, Jeffrey Gorman for Congress in the 20th District, Mark Reed for Congress in the 30th District, Buzz Patterson for Congress in the 7th District, and Mike Cargile for Congress in the 35th District. Mike Cargile for Congress in the 35th District, Kevin Cookingham for Congress in the 16th District, and Greg Raths for Congress in the 45th District.
Recent Comments