Like Her Political Career, Stacey Abrams’ Election Lawfare Group Is Headed Toward Irrelevance
The Stacey Abrams-founded Fair Fight is laying off 75 percent of its staff due to 'rising litigation costs' and inadequate fundraising.
Fair Fight, an activist group founded by twice-failed gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, sued True the Vote over its efforts to bolster the integrity of the 2020 election. Fair Fight alleged the election watchdog had violated the Voting Rights Act's protections against voter intimidation.
Despite the Biden Department of Justice pressing its thumb on the scale in favor of Fair Fight, an Obama-appointed federal judge dealt Abrams yet another defeat Tuesday, ruling in favor of TTV.
TTV, a Texas-based group involved in Dinesh D'Souza's "2000 Mules" film as well as a legal battle with the China-linked election software group Konnech, called into question the eligibility of over 364,000 voters before the January 2021 runoff election for two critical U.S. Senate seats in Georgia. The stakes were high as theclose election would determine control of the Senate, and TTV figured there was good reason to suspect the voters had been ineligible to cast ballots owing to a change in residency.
According to one of Fair Fight's trial experts, TTV had a hand in ultimately challenging 250,783 supposed Georgia voters across 65 counties.
Fair Fight filed a complaint against TTV on Dec. 23, 2020, alleging the election integrity group intimidated voters "through a multi-pronged approach: challenging voters' registrations based on unreliable information; recruiting citizen watchdogs and U.S. Navy SEALS to watch voters return their ballots and monitor polling places; and, offering a $1 million reward to incentivize its supporters to find evidence of alleged illegal voting."
Scott Berson, one of the plaintiffs, claimed during the trial that he returned to Georgia's Muscogee County after completing a master's degree at Auburn University to discover that his eligibility to vote in the upcoming races was in question, reported the Associated Press.
"It was a very discouraging and frustrating thing to hear," said Berson.
In January 2023, the Biden Department of Justice filed a brief in the suit on behalf of Fair Fight, attempting to poke holes in TTV's defense, particularly its sense that its voter challenges didn't amount to intimidation under state law.
Even with the DOJ's intervention, Abrams' group couldn't eke out a win.
Judge Steve Jones of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia indicated in his 145-page order that "no action taken by the Defendants in this case constitute voter intimidation."
While critical of TTV's list of possible ineligible voters, suggesting it "utterly lacked reliability," Jones acknowledged that there was insufficient evidence to show that "any voter in Georgia was reasonably intimidated by Defendants' actions."
Jones noted that the ultimate decision to cause a voter to provide additional information regarding their eligibility to vote in a particular county was up to the county boards of election.
"This intermediary between the challenger and the eligibility inquiry ... creates a significant causation issue for Plaintiffs case," wrote Jones. "It impugns the direct connection between the alleged intimidating conduct by Defendants and the voter allegedly intimidated, and breaks the chain of causation for purposes of establishing liability for voter intimidation."
Jones concluded, "Not only have Plaintiffs failed to overcome the fact that their actions did not result in any direct voter contact or alone include or direct county Boards of Elections to pursue an eligibility inquiry, but there is no evidence that Defendants’ actions caused (or attempted to cause) any voter to be intimidated, coerced, or threatened in voting."
Like its founder who has exhibited a tendency to deny legitimate results, Fair Fight didn't take the loss well.
"We believe True the Vote used Donald Trump's Big Lie as the basis to launch eligibility challenges against more than 364,000 Georgians ahead of the runoff—many of whom were Black, brown, and first-time voters," Fair Fight executive director Cianti Stewart-Reid said in a statement.
"Efforts by conspiracy theorists and anti-voter extremists to strip eligible voters from the rolls through mass voter challenges and aggressive voter purges are one of the biggest threats to our democracy and upcoming elections in 2024," added Stewart-Reid.
Fair Fight may be especially sore because Judge Jones rejected another of its lawsuits in September. Abrams' Fair Fight Action claimed in a complaint that Georgia had "grossly mismanaged" the 2018 election, depriving some citizens of their right to vote. Jones figured otherwise, stating, "Although Georgia's election system is not perfect, the challenged practices violate neither the constitution nor the VRA."
TTV president Catherine Engelbrecht said of the victory, "Today's ruling sends a clear message to those who would attempt to control the course of our nation through lawfare and intimidation. American citizens will not be silenced."
Jake Evans, lead TTV attorney, stated, "This decision is monumental. It vindicates True the Vote in totality and establishes that eligibility challenges under Section 230 are a proper method to ensure voter rolls are accurate. I am grateful to help achieve this great victory."
The election integrity group made clear that it "remains steadfast in its mission to support trustworthy elections and looks forward to assisting citizens in future such lawful efforts."
— (@)
Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
A special report published on Monday by Politico revealed that the law firm belonging to Stacey Abram's campaign chairman was paid nearly $10 million in legal fees for services rendered to Abrams' nonprofit group, Fair Fight Action, for its work on a lawsuit that recently failed in a federal court.
In addition to raising concerns about a possible conflict of interest, the exorbitant amounts paid to the Abrams-affiliated firm, while not unprecedented, have nevertheless been flagged as exceptional.
Stacey Abrams is the Democrat candidate currently seeking to unseat Republican Gov. Brian Kemp in Georgia's gubernatorial race. The chairman for her campaign, who also happens to be a close friend of Abrams', is Allegra Lawrence-Hardy.
Politico reported that Lawrence-Hardy is one of two named partners at the law firm Lawrence and Bundy. Lawrence-Hardy's firm was reportedly paid $9.4 million by Fair Fight Action in 2019 and 2020.
Fair Fight Action filed a lawsuit after Abrams was soundly defeated in Georgia's 2018 gubernatorial election by 54,723 votes — a result the Democrat candidate gained a reputation as an "election denier" for rejecting.
The lawsuit claimed that the state had "grossly mismanaged" the election, depriving some citizens of their right to vote.
The Fair Fight Action v. Raffensperger trial began on April 11 and was rejected by U.S. District Judge Steve Jones in Atlanta on Sept. 30.
Jones, an Obama appointee who found for the defendants on all counts, stated that while "Georgia's election system is not perfect, the challenged practices violate neither the constitution nor the [Voting Rights Act of 1965]," as had been alleged by Abrams.
Kemp said of the expensive legal failure: "Today, Stacey Abrams and her organization lost in court - on all counts. From day one, Abrams has used this lawsuit to line her pockets, sow distrust in our democratic institutions, and build her own celebrity."
\u201cToday, Stacey Abrams and her organization lost in court - on all counts. From day one, Abrams has used this lawsuit to line her pockets, sow distrust in our democratic institutions, and build her own celebrity. https://t.co/aGlgEQPfSU\u201d— Brian Kemp (@Brian Kemp) 1664575886
$25 million of the roughly $61 million Fair Fight Action raised between 2019 and 2020 went into advancing this failed lawsuit.
Of the eight law firms that worked on the case, the largest amount reportedly went to Lawrence-Hardy's firm, which acted as lead counsel.
The deputy director for litigation at the Legal Defense Fund, Leah Aden, underscored that the legal fees paid to Lawrence-Hardy's firm altogether accounted for an amount obscenely higher than in most voting rights cases brought to federal court.
Aden told Politico, "The typical case is a couple of hundred thousand dollars and can take a couple of years. ... Beyond $10 million would be very shocking, I would say."
Kathleen Clark, a legal ethics professor at Washington University in St. Louis, suggested to Politico, "Fair Fight Action ought to explain why this lawsuit cost so much. ... I think there are significant questions about this choice of firm and just why this lawsuit was so much more expensive."
Although Lawrence-Hardy suggested to Politico that her firm provides "other services for Fair Fight Action," she did not specify what those were.
Former Fair Fight Action organizing director Hillary Holley made clear that in speaking of "other services," should Lawrence-Hardy have been referring to work done on a 2020 case brought by Fair Fight Inc. against True the Vote, that case would only have accounted for two months of billings.
It is unclear how many additional millions the law firm may have billed the Abrams group over the past two years.
Lawrence-Hardy's firm made a great deal of money advancing the ill-fated lawsuit that Abrams appeared to have used, in turn, not only to raise money but as a campaign tool.
Craig Holman, a government affairs lobbyist at Public Citizen, told Politico, "It is a very clear conflict of interest because with that kind of close link to the litigation and her friend that provides an opportunity where the friend gets particularly enriched from this litigation."
"The outcome of that litigation can directly affect her campaign itself," added Holman.
Last week, it came to light that Fair Fight PAC, the political action group founded by Abrams, had a director whose inexperienced friends and family were allegedly getting significant paydays while maintaining other full-time jobs.
In response to a critical Fox News Digital report, Fair Fight PAC issued a press release, stating that on Oct. 13, the organization "became aware that PAC funds may have been incorrectly paid to consultants."
"Fair Fight strives to serve with the utmost integrity, as is core to our values. We take these matters seriously and have initiated a comprehensive investigation," the statement added.
The individual warranting investigation was the PAC's political director, longtime Abrams aide André Fields.
Fields' sister, Darius Faulk, received over $120,000 despite having no political experience. Asa Fludd and Cruz Alvarado, both friends of Fields, received tens of thousands of dollars from Fair Fight PAC — $29,800 and $29,000 respectively.
While Fox News Digital indicated the amount paid by the PAC to these three individuals was over $178,000, CNN's review of the FEC filings from this and the previous election cycles suggests the figure may be closer to $250,000.