šŗšø Non sibi sed patriae šŗš²
ā¢Hoosier Mom, Wife, Christian, Patriot.
ā¢Constitutional Republican
ā¢Pro-life for the unborn and pro-woodchipper for pedos
OH MY GOSH
DHS Sec. Mullin just revealed absolutely SHOCKING numbers
- 450k kids were taken by unvetted sponsors under Biden
- Some kids claimed that they were raped over 600 times!!!
- A third of all females were sexually assaulted while being trafficked to our border
- DHS found 146k kids so far
The Biden regime ran a massive child sex trafficking operation.
You are not angry enough.
INDIANA
Consolidated Grain and Barge Corporation in Mt Vernon, Indiana (Posey County) expands with partnership with the Indiana Economic Development Corporation. The business is located near the convergence of the Ohio and Wabash rivers in furthest southwestern part of the State.
Btw, The IEDC got it right this time. This is the Senate District of Jim Tomes.
āOn Tuesday, May 19, I joined other state and local officials at the groundbreaking of the new Consolidated Grain and Barge Corporation soybean facility expansion at the Ports of Indiana-Mount Vernon.
The new expansion is the largest investment in the port in more than 20 years and is designed to triple grain handling capacity at the Mount Vernon port. The expansion includes new grain storage and truck unloading facilities, as well as a conveyor system that transfers grain between multiple sites.
The Mount Vernon port is the largest in the state and ships exports around the world. I am excited to see how this expansion will help increase trade and support our Hoosier farmers.ā
Senator Jim Tomes
@LGMicahBeckwith@MicahBeckwith@GovBraun@indianagop@Jim_Banks@Indy_reporter_@MaxForIndiana@Jamie4INgov@JayStarkeySen6@BDP4Indiana@INFREEDOMCAUCUS
INDIANA
Vanderburgh County had the LOWEST voter turnout in the entire state of Indiana this primary election.
Not one of the lowest.
The lowest.
Out of 123,739 registered voters, only 10,338 people cast a ballot.
That is just 8%.
Statewide turnout was around 17%, which is already lowābut Vanderburgh County came in at less than half of that.
Let that sink in.
More than 9 out of 10 registered voters here did not participate in choosing local leadership, judges, council races, county offices, and the people making decisions on taxes, utilities, development, roads, neighborhoods, and public spending.
This is how the same systems stay in place.
This is how the same circles of influence remain untouched.
This is how the āgood old boy clubā survives.
Not because they are unbeatableābut because most people never show up to challenge it.
And honestly, part of the problem may be structural.
Vanderburgh County is heavily driven by manufacturing, healthcare, retail, and shift-based work. Long hours, overtime, physical exhaustion, and limited flexibility make it harder for working people to get to the polls.
When your one day off is your only chance to rest, voting can feel like one more burden.
But there is another problem tooādisconnection.
People do not believe their voice matters.
They see vague agendas.
Poor communication.
Meetings where decisions feel made before public comment starts.
Elected officials disengaged during meetings.
Party leadership that often feels distant, disingenuous, and disconnected from the people they claim to represent.
After enough of that, people stop showing up.
Not because they do not care.
Because they stop believing participation matters.
That is dangerous.
Because if only 8% vote, a very small group decides the future for everyone else.
If we want change in this city and this county, we cannot keep sitting out.
We have to break the cycle.
We have to increase turnout.
We have to show up.
We have to pay attention before decisions are final.
We have to stop handing power to the same closed circles by default.
Government does not just happen behind closed doors.
A lot of it happens in public meetings nobody attends and elections nobody votes in.
If we want better, we have to be there.
Because silence is not neutrality.
Silence is surrender.
@SOSDiegoMorales@INFREEDOMCAUCUS@Jamie4INgov@JayStarkeySen6@Jim_Banks@lcgm1951@CherylWMusgrave@MicahBeckwith@vote4mdavis@LGMicahBeckwith@GovBraun
#Evansville #VanderburghCounty #VoteLocal #LocalGovernment #IndianaPolitics #CivicEngagement #Transparency #CommunityMatters #BreakTheCycle
I want to extend my heartfelt congratulations to all those who won their primaries last week. You have earned the trust of the voters, and I wish you success in the battles ahead.
Though this round did not go as we had hoped, let me be clear: I am not going anywhere. In four years, I will be back on the ballot, stronger, wiser, and more determined than ever to fight for the future of Indiana.
In the meantime, I will continue serving our communities every single day. You will still find me out in the neighborhoods, listening to your concerns, fighting for solutions, and working alongside anyone who wants to build a better, stronger, and more prosperous Indiana. The work doesnāt stop just because one election is over. Our fight for a brighter future continues ā and so do I.
INDIANA
Itās now 7 days until Primary Election Day in Indiana.
Tuesday, May 5, 2026.
Yes, early voting has already been available for a couple of weeks.
But history shows what we all know is true: these final 7 days are when most voters finally start paying attention.
So now is the time to look past the glossy mailers, polished slogans, and āconservative Republicanā labels ā and look at the actual record.
Ron Alting.
Jim Buck.
Travis Holdman.
Liz Brown.
Rick Niemeyer.
Linda Rogers.
Dan Dernulc.
Spencer Deery.
Greg Goode.
Greg Walker.
These 10 Republican incumbents have an average age of roughly 66 and have served a combined 118+ years in the Indiana Senate.
The question is simple:
Are they actually representing grassroots Republican voters?
Or are they being protected by the same Senate establishment that wants to keep power exactly where it is?
Look at the pattern.
Ron Alting has served in the Indiana Senate for nearly three decades.
Greg Walker has served for nearly two decades.
Jim Buck and Travis Holdman have each served roughly 17ā18 years in the Senate.
Liz Brown and Rick Niemeyer have each served for more than a decade.
Linda Rogers has been there for several years.
And even the newer incumbents ā Dan Dernulc, Spencer Deery, and Greg Goode ā are already being backed by major establishment and caucus support.
That is the real issue.
This is not just about age.
This is not just about years in office.
This is about power, protection, and whether the Republican grassroots still have a voice.
Eight of these ten Republican incumbents opposed the Trump-backed redistricting effort:
Dan Dernulc
Rick Niemeyer
Linda Rogers
Travis Holdman
Jim Buck
Spencer Deery
Greg Goode
Greg Walker
Then many of these same incumbents were protected by Senate caucus money, PAC money, insider money, and establishment support against conservative primary challengers.
That should tell voters something.
When grassroots Republicans wanted stronger action, too many of these incumbents sided with caution, insiders, or the political status quo.
When taxpayers wanted real relief, some of these incumbents supported or enabled tolling authority, tax credits, subsidies, grant programs, fee structures, or weak tax-relief plans.
When conservatives wanted smaller government, several supported policies that expanded public-health structures, created new state programs, grew bureaucracy, or picked winners and losers through special-interest tax incentives.
When voters wanted free-market leadership, too many records showed support for corporate welfare, film tax credits, data-center incentives, green-energy-style programs, carbon-sequestration schemes, and other government-managed economic favoritism.
When parents and social conservatives wanted strong leadership, there were failures or questionable votes on issues like girlsā sports, religious instruction, anti-DEI legislation, immigration enforcement, and pro-life policy.
When Second Amendment voters wanted constitutional carry moved forward, Liz Brownās Judiciary Committee did not move the House-passed bill before the deadline.
When gun-rights voters looked at Greg Walkerās record, they saw a vote against permitless carry.
When election-integrity conservatives looked at Greg Walkerās record, they saw a vote against election-integrity legislation.
When pro-life voters looked at Ron Altingās record, they saw a vote against Indianaās major post-Dobbs abortion restriction.
When anti-DEI conservatives looked at Greg Goodeās record, they saw a vote against anti-DEI legislation.
When religious-liberty conservatives looked at Dan Dernulcās record, they saw a vote against religious-instruction access.
And when Trump-aligned Republican voters looked at the 2025 redistricting fight, they saw eight of these ten incumbents stand against the effort.
Again, this is not about one vote.
It is about a pattern.
A pattern of long tenure.
A pattern of establishment protection.
A pattern of PAC funding.
A pattern of business, banking, real estate, housing, labor, utility, legal, and insider campaign support.
A pattern of Republican incumbents saying the right things at election time while too often voting with the system once they are safely back in office.
These final 7 days matter.
This is when voters start asking questions.
This is when records matter.
This is when grassroots conservatives need to look closely at who is funding these incumbents, who is protecting them, and whether their votes actually match their campaign promises.
Indiana conservatives should be asking:
Who fought for real property tax reform?
Who stood for parental rights?
Who defended girlsā sports?
Who protected religious liberty?
Who backed pro-life values?
Who defended the Second Amendment?
Who stood against DEI?
Who fought for election integrity?
Who opposed corporate welfare?
Who fought for limited government?
Who protected taxpayers?
Who stood with grassroots Republican voters when it actually mattered?
And who sided with the establishment?
The question every voter should ask before May 5 is simple:
After all these years in office, who are these incumbents really representing?
Are they representing you?
Or are they representing the Senate establishment, PAC donors, lobbyist-connected interests, banking interests, real estate interests, business groups, labor PACs, and political insiders who are funding and protecting them?
Indiana does not need more protected incumbents.
Indiana needs conservative fighters.
Seven days.
Pay attention.
Check the record.
Then vote like it matters.
DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH!! This should help get you started https://t.co/kqzRDXBtN2
@INGOP@sarahofindiana@INFREEDOMCAUCUS@LGMicahBeckwith@MicahBeckwith@GovBraun@RBagsbyIndiana@Trevor4indiana@BrendaWilsonIN@LizBrownUS@AGToddRokita@brenda_swi
As Hoosiers, weāre proud to call Indiana home, a state full of opportunity. While our legislature meets part-time, our commitment to making Indiana the best it can be is full-time.
Let's Evaluate The Voting Records Of Indiana Republicans Who Opposed Redistricting
Can you trust records like this?
https://t.co/KgP3mKcnkj
@ScottPresler@TPAction@bgalsWI@Indy_reporter_
I love this. š
To the person who wrote this, thank you for sharing what so many of us think of our President.ā„ļøšŗšø
Mr. President,
ā
I donāt know if youāll ever read this. Probably not. But Iām writing it anyway because my wife and I talk about this all the time, and somebody needs to say it out loud.
ā
We canāt wait for the day youāre no longer President.
ā
Not because weāre tired of you. The opposite. Because you deserve to go home. You deserve quiet mornings. You deserve to sit on your own porch without the weight of 330 million people sitting on your shoulders. You deserve your family back. You deserve peace.
ā
You didnāt have to do any of this.
ā
You had the money.
You had the name.
You had the life most men only dream about.
You couldāve spent the rest of your days golfing, traveling, watching your grandkids grow up.
ā
Instead you stepped into a fire that nearly cost you everything.
ā
They mocked you. They sued you. They raided your home. They tried to bankrupt you. They tried to lock you up. They dragged your wife and kids through the mud. They put a bullet through your ear and you got up with your fist in the air and kept going.
ā
For what?
ā
For us. Regular people. Truck drivers. Welders. Waitresses. Roughnecks. Farmers. Single moms working two jobs. Grandparents on a fixed income watching the country they built get handed away.
ā
You didnāt owe us a thing. And you gave us everything.
ā
You risked your name. Your legacy. Your safety. Your familyās safety. Your brand. Your freedom. All of it. So this country could have one more shot at being what it was supposed to be.
ā
And the truth nobody wants to admit?
ā
We didnāt deserve a President like you.
ā
A nation this divided, this ungrateful, this asleep at the wheel didnāt earn a man willing to bleed for it. But God sent you anyway. And Iāll thank Him for that until the day I die. š
ā
So when the day finally comes that you walk away from that desk, I hope you sleep good. I hope your wife laughs again without looking over her shoulder. I hope your kids breathe easy. I hope you golf till the sun goes down and nobody bothers you for nothing.
ā
You earned every bit of it.
ā
Thank you, Mr. President. From a truck driver in Texas who prays for you often.
ā
God bless you. God bless your family. And God bless the United States of America. šŗšø
Saint Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle. Be our defense against the wickedness and snares of the Devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray, and do thou, O Prince of the heavenly hosts, by the power of God, cast into hell Satan, and all the evil spirits, who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls. Amen.
Iām balling my eyes out. President Trump ā I want to live to make this country great. Thatās why I want to liveā
Nobody will ever be like Trump
America is so blessed š
While traveling Indiana, Iāve been asking state legislators
to sponsor legislation that would require proof of citizenship to register to vote.
Letās work on the SAVE America Act both at the federal level & in all 50 states.