A group called the "Pro-Choice Majority 2024" sent messages like the following all the way up to the moment the polls closed:
"Kamala SINKING in Pennsylvania: 46% - 48% We need your help!!! RUSH $20 TO DEFEAT DONALD TRUMP NOW! go.prochoicedems.io/1105b4"
"If we can't raise $20,000 to Pro-Choice Majority before polls close in just HOURS, we may as well hand Trump a victory and he'll END reproductive freedoms FOREVER."
"So our generous donors UNLOCKED a 400%-MATCH on all donations to Pro-Choice Majority to help DEFEAT Trump & SAVE reproductive rights!"
As you can see, the general message was clear: send us all your money, otherwise Trump will win and stop you from getting an abortion. Clearly the target audience was younger women donors, many of whom were duped into sending their money to the fake PAC.
(Related: Did you catch our report detailing the ways in which voter fraud has been taking place in Detroit?)
The whole charade was a bait-and-switch devised at the last minute – Pro-Choice Majority 2024 was formed in January of this year, after all. The group successfully raised more than $3.6 million, with most of the money being spent on consultants and fundraisers.
Records from the Federal Election Commission (FEC) show that Pro-Choice Majority 2024 spent exactly zero dollars on the things it texted Democrat donors about, including "opposing Trump" and "supporting Harris."
"The group did not make any transfers to the Harris campaign, either," notes investigative reporter Lee Fang. "Instead, much of the group's funds flowed to Mothership Strategies, a D.C. firm founded in 2015 by former Democratic Party staffers."
Mothership Strategies employs fundraising tactics so aggressive that many probing eyes have begun scrutinizing the group. Mothership Strategies is tied to a host of Democratic PACs from which it extracted nearly $50,000 over the past several years for advising the Democrat Party about Kamala's campaign.
"That total does not include the money spent over the last few weeks given the FEC's quarterly disclosure schedule," Fang notes. "It is likely to be much higher."
"Many of the PACs tied to Mothership Strategies similarly used alarmist messages demanding donations to defeat Trump yet funneled vast sums of donor money back to consulting firms."
The closer America got to Election Day, the more money Mothership Strategies started receiving from the likes of the Stop Gun Violence PAC, which paid it nearly half a million dollars based on a pitch to donors that money was needed "to BAN Trump from running for office." More than two-thirds of the total cash received by the Stop Gun Violence PAC was ultimately paid to consultants, the largest of which is Mothership Strategies.
The Vote PAC is another that appealed for cash from donors for specious reasons including "to demand Congress invoke the 14th Amendment to BAN Marjorie Taylor Greene from Congress." Based on this phony claim, the Democrat PAC pulled in at least $5.6 million.
The Trump administration now has a lot of work to do uncovering and holding accountable all this election corruption. Even though he won the election over Kamala, the type of corruption now being exposed on the Democrat side of the aisle shows that America's election system is in major need of reform.
The latest post-election news can be found at Rigged.news.
Sources for this article include: