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October 13, 2022

It’s no secret that billionaire philanthropist and financier George Soros has had a hand in the rise of many major political players.  From his heavy investment in the sheriffs in Arizona to his funding of grassroots activists in Ferguson, Soros’s money and influence seem to be nestled in every nook and cranny across the country.  But just in the past month, two judges in two different states have stood up against prominent figures that are heavily funded by Soros: Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams and Virginia’s Loudoun County commonwealth attorney Buta Biberaj.

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Stacey Abrams Election Fraud Lawsuit is Discarded

On September 30, U.S. district judge Steven Jones threw out the lawsuit filed in 2018 by Stacey Abrams and her political action committee, Fair Fight Georgia.  The Epoch Times reported that the lawsuit alleged election irregularities, and Judge Jones ruled that “although Georgia’s election system is not perfect, the challenged practices violate neither the constitution nor the [Voting Rights Amendment].”  However, Abrams was still able to reinstate 22,000 rejected provisional and absentee ballots after the 2018 election.

This judge was on to something when he said Georgia’s election system isn’t perfect.  Here are just a few of the inconsistencies from the 2020 election you can find documentation of on the VoterGA website:

  1. There are six sworn affidavits of counterfeit mail-in ballots in Fulton Co. election results scaling into the tens of thousands.
  2. All 350,000+ original in-person ballot images in Fulton are missing in violation of federal and state retention law.
  3. All 393,000+ original ballot images in Cobb are missing in violation of federal and state retention law.

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This is also not the only legal action that Abrams has initiated over elections.  First, we have the now-infamous consent decree, which stemmed from a lawsuit filed by Abrams prior to the 2020 election, making it nearly impossible to verify signatures on ballots.  The lawsuit claimed that minorities were disproportionately impacted with ballot rejections.

Then, back in December 2020, we had the ruling from a judge who happened to be Abrams’s sister, which blocked two Georgia counties from purging its voter rolls of roughly 4,000 allegedly inactive voters ahead of the following week’s runoff elections for U.S. Senate.

It is well documented that Abrams receives most of her campaign funds from George Soros.  These contributions go back as far as 2013, but more recently, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that Soros just dropped $1 million into Abrams’s gubernatorial campaign.

George Soros’s financial connections also extend to the Republican Party in Georgia.  Soros is the primary investor in Rivian, having invested about $2 billion at the end of 2021.  The plans for this electric car plant in Georgia are moving forward thanks to the tax breaks being generously offered by Governor Brian Kemp to Rivian.  Kemp is also pursuing the suspension of EPA regulations in order to build and operate this $5-billion facility

Buta Biberaj is Removed from Scott Smith Case

Virginia attorneys such as Steve Descano, Buta Biberaj, and Parisa Dehghani Tafti have all received significant financial backing from Soros.  According to donation reports from TransparencyUSA.org, in 2019, Soros’s Justice and Public Safety PAC donated $601,368.95 to Descano, $621,144.87 to Tafti, and $861,038.62 to Biberaj.  And a particular judge in Virginia has been calling out Loudoun County commonwealth’s attorney Buta Biberaj over concerns of her being impartial, as well as soft on crime.