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You Can Make a Difference Today by Supporting SB 222 to Ban Zuckerbucks!

SB 222 - Prohibit private money from influencing elections without exceptions

The 2nd interim report from the office of the Wisconsin Special Counsel authored by form Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman established that the Chan Zuckerberg initiative spent $400 million to essentially buy the 2020 election.

Mark Zuckerberg spent $330 million of that money to establish the Center for Technology and Civic Life which he staffed with a policy director David Plouffe, who authored the book entitled “A Citizens Guide to Beating Donald Trump.” Much of the money was used to establish partisan get out the vote efforts, provide complimentary resources to control electronic voting system and to implement a drop box scheme that facilitated ballot trafficking in key battleground states. We have videos of them operating in several Georgia counties.

In Georgia, the Secretary of State allowed $45 million to be distributed disproportionally to counties in violation of Equal Protection clauses in the Georgia and U.S. Constitutions. 

After the 2020 election debacle, the legislature rightfully passed SB 202, the Election Integrity Act 2021, to ban direct private money from interfering in future Georgia elections. However, the Act did not ban the state from receiving money, didn’t ban counties from receiving indirect private money and did not ban complimentary technical resources.

County commissions have received private money and routed it to their elections division.

In 2020, some Georgia counties accepting Zuckerbucks also gave CTCL third-party human resource groups such as U.S. Digital Response and Elections Group access to elections equipment without a contract.

SB 222 closes most of the current loopholes but it exempts complimentary services that can result in counties turning control of elections equipment over to third parties.

Contact House Members to Support SB 222 to correct this gross vulnerability and further the security of Georgia elections.

You Can Make a Difference Today by Supporting SB 222 to Ban Zuckerbucks!

SB 222 - Prohibit private money from influencing elections without exceptions

The 2nd interim report from the office of the Wisconsin Special Counsel authored by form Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman established that the Chan Zuckerberg initiative spent $400 million to essentially buy the 2020 election.

Mark Zuckerberg spent $330 million of that money to establish the Center for Technology and Civic Life which he staffed with a policy director David Plouffe, who authored the book entitled “A Citizens Guide to Beating Donald Trump.” Much of the money was used to establish partisan get out the vote efforts, provide complimentary resources to control electronic voting system and to implement a drop box scheme that facilitated ballot trafficking in key battleground states. We have videos of them operating in several Georgia counties.

In Georgia, the Secretary of State allowed $45 million to be distributed disproportionally to counties in violation of Equal Protection clauses in the Georgia and U.S. Constitutions. 

After the 2020 election debacle, the legislature rightfully passed SB 202, the Election Integrity Act 2021, to ban direct private money from interfering in future Georgia elections. However, the Act did not ban the state from receiving money, didn’t ban counties from receiving indirect private money and did not ban complimentary technical resources.

County commissions have received private money and routed it to their elections division.

In 2020, some Georgia counties accepting Zuckerbucks also gave CTCL third-party human resource groups such as U.S. Digital Response and Elections Group access to elections equipment without a contract.

SB 222 closes most of the current loopholes but it exempts complimentary services that can result in counties turning control of elections equipment over to third parties.

Contact House Members to Support SB 222 to correct this gross vulnerability and further the security of Georgia elections.