The pursuit of foreign money by Democrats would not be something new. Just ask President Clinton.
Many Republicans were stunned when Vice President Harris’s campaign raised $1 billion in an incredibly short time. Now there are indications that a significant amount of that money may have come from illegal sources.
So, the next ad you see for Ms. Harris may have been bought with Iranian, Chinese, or drug cartel money. As John Solomon reported in Just the News, Democratic fundraiser ActBlue has been subpoenaed to tell Congress about some fundraising activity which the U.S. Department of Treasury has called suspicious.
According to Mr. Solomon, who has been investigating this system for weeks: “The dramatic developments were communicated to House members and ActBlue itself in a series of memos this week obtained by Just the News that reaffirmed that lawmakers fear foreign adversaries like China, Iran, Venezuela and Russia may be routing illicit foreign money into Democratic coffers by using the names of unsuspecting American donors.”
Advertisement
A Republican professional in Wisconsin, Mark Block, has reported that 385 donations were made in his name through ActBlue. He asserted that 35 of those donations were earmarked to the Harris campaign. As a Republican activist, he never gave one donation through ActBlue. This could be a case of identity theft, and Mr. Block is suing ActBlue under Wisconsin’s anti-racketeering laws.
The pursuit of foreign money by Democrats is not something new. In President Clinton’s 1996 re-election campaign, the so-called “Chinagate” scandal disclosed that Chinese and Indonesian business owners had given millions of dollars to the Democratic National Committee using fake names.
I was Speaker of the House at the time. With my support, Congressman Dan Burton and his chief investigator, Dave Bossie, tracked down illegal donors as far away as Hong Kong. Their investigation led to dozens of people being convicted of violating federal campaign finance laws and several going to jail.
Patriotic Patriot
Article URL : https://archive.ph/44KjG#selection-401.0-431.304