Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) has commuted the prison sentence of former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters, whom a partisan judge over-sentenced for politically incorrect speech about the 2020 election. Democrats' reaction to this case offers the latest proof of how dangerously totalitarian they have become.
Terrified of scrutiny of alleged irregularities, Democrat prosecutors and judges waged a lawfare campaign against countless Republicans who dared question the legitimacy of Biden's victory. But Peters' case was exceptionally obscene.
On May 15, Polis announced Peters will be released on parole on June 1, slashing her draconian nine-year sentence roughly in half. This comes a month after the Colorado Court of Appeals ordered her resentenced because of improper consideration of her right to free speech in the original sentencing.
In his commutation letter, Polis admitted that Peters' actions "did not interfere with any election" and "did not have to do with ballot counting." He framed the commutation around disproportionate sentencing and First Amendment concerns, acknowledging Peters was "over-sentenced."
https://t.co/9KA5xosYMK
LOUISIANA!! Don't forget SATURDAY, MAY 16 is primary election day!
For accurate election date information in your state, head to https://t.co/uTxk4rmQza
President Donald Trump's Department of Justice (DOJ) has filed lawsuits against 30 states and the District of Columbia for refusing to hand over their voter registration lists. Its mission of ensuring clean voter rolls by identifying dead voters, non-citizens, and duplicate registrations is morally legitimate and legally sound. But its methods are leading to failure.
The DOJ currently stands at 0-for-6 in federal district courts, with its most recent loss coming in Arizona. In that case, the judge made a crucial distinction between what federal law authorizes—that states hand over data provided by voting registrants—and what the DOJ is demanding—states’ complete voter files. Although it’s technically the same information in a different format, judges are unlikely to budge on this point.
https://t.co/vrL9Opovp2
Congressional Democrats talk tough about leveling the playing field. Now they’re complaining that the Supreme Court just gave them one. It turns out “fair” meant “rigged in our favor” – and on April 29 the court called their bluff.
Louisiana v. Callais is about ending a 60-year abuse that turned the 1965 Voting Rights Act from a tool for stopping racial discrimination into a weapon for mandating it. Under a warped interpretation of the law’s original purpose, federal courts long forced states to draw congressional maps based on voters’ race.
The result: 144 majority-minority districts, just 23 of which elected Republicans in 2024. Call it what it is: affirmative action for Democratic members of Congress.
https://t.co/jaVwXVGQsT
After Pennsylvania taxpayers funded a lengthy legal battle in which the state fought to prevent taxpayers from seeing election integrity records, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in a unanimous April 28 opinion, has sided with taxpayers.
The case started with a 2021 Right to Know request by open-source investigator and election analyst Heather Honey. She asked Lycoming County for a digital copy of the Cast Vote Record (CVR) file for every precinct tabulator and central tabulator used in the 2020 General Election.
Notably, in August 2025, President Donald Trump appointed Honey to serve as the Department of Homeland Security's deputy assistant secretary for elections integrity. Her expertise prompted bitter attacks from leftists aiming to discredit her, but they can't argue with the facts in the election records she has made accessible to everyone in Pennsylvania, all because she refused to back down.
Because of the court's decision, going forward, anyone can request CVRs in Pennsylvania and use it for election integrity research.
https://t.co/vTCBOnDm75
WEST VIRGINIA!! Don't forget TUESDAY, MAY 12 is primary election day!
For accurate election date information in your state, head to https://t.co/uTxk4rnooI
More evidence that we need to pass the SAVE America Act.
This midterm election year, election integrity is a hot-button issue, with President Donald Trump and the Republicans pushing the SAVE Act for securing our elections and Democrats frantically working to protect their centuries-old fraud apparatus.
You won’t believe how many illegal votes the Trump administration and a judicial watchdog have uncovered just in a few states – enough to delegitimize contested elections of the past few years.
Indeed, using numbers released by the Justice Department, the Homeland Security Department, and Judicial Watch, the feds and watchdogs have identified at least 6.38 million illegal aliens’, dead people’s, and other illicit names on voter rolls across the USA.
https://t.co/eJoj5s7wkY
The late President Jimmy Carter could have cemented his legacy as a rare, sensible Democrat who helped improve America's election laws. He chose Democrat power instead.
In 2005, Carter chaired a commission that assessed America's election system was dangerously exposed because of how it handled mail-in voting and offered excellent legislative recommendations.
Unfortunately, in 2020—as Democrat leaders launched an aggressive push for universal mail-in voting, no-excuse absentee ballots, drop boxes, and ballot harvesting—the Carter Center claimed the report had been "misinterpreted," putting a sad undoing to Carter's commendable legacy on election integrity.
https://t.co/kROijxV0KQ
President Donald Trump's election-related executive order on March 31 slid under the headlines, but it provides a creative way to secure fair voting if Congress fails to pass the election reform that voters demand.
The order directs federal agencies to build a citizenship verification system for state election officials; requires the USPS to establish trackable, barcoded standards for mail-in ballots; and prevents the USPS from returning mail-in ballots from ineligible voters.
Trump and Congressional Republicans received a historic mandate, in 2024, driven largely by frustration over lax election laws that make fraudulent voting and tabulation errors too common.
As the Republican-led Senate stalls passage of the Safeguard Voter American Eligibility Act (SAVE America Act), by refusing to force a talking filibuster, it falls on the president to protect elections as best he can, according to existing legislation.
https://t.co/KRDyTzsV4e
A federal judge has given the ground-breaking @VoteReference (VRF) another victory for voter roll transparency.
He ruled that Massachusetts officials cannot hide that state's voting records from VRF and the public.
Earlier, a New Mexico made a similar ruling.
We started VRF and https://t.co/vU3YpsLzKw in 2021 to give America its first-ever portal to search public voter records and we now are publishing in about 40 states.
Some states still don't believe in voter roll transparency.
We won't stop until we are publishing in all 50 states.
https://t.co/AZRjVSf3Qy
The U.S. Supreme Court heard a case yesterday about whether the state of Mississippi should be allowed to count late-arriving ballots after election day.
Most observers said Justices' questions indicated the Court is leaning against allowing the practice.
In all, 17 states and the District of Columbia count late ballots, with at least two allowing them to arrive two weeks after election day.
This practice is another incubator for fraud, and echoes our Founder and CEO @DougTruax, who, after the questionable 2020 election, called for banning late-arriving ballots except in rare instances.
It was a good idea then and a good idea now.
Let's make it Election Day Again.
https://t.co/qdaVFztUi5
It’s time to force a talking filibuster on national Voter ID.
Make Senate Democrats stand up and explain why Americans shouldn’t need an ID to vote — when we need one for everything else.
No more hiding. Put them on record. @DougTruax
https://t.co/2YNBuvneW8