George Soros PAC reportedly dumps another $1 million into supporting Democrat Stacey Abrams in Georgia



Left-wing billionaire George Soros has provided an additional $1 million to support Democratic Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, Fox News reported, citing campaign finance records. Soros is notorious for using his massive fortune to advance radical leftist ideology.

Fox News reported that according to state filings, the liberal megadonor's Democracy PAC II directed the funds to One Georgia Inc. on September 30 — the outlet described One Georgia Inc. as a leadership committee, which Abrams chairs, and which is utilized to boost her run for office.

The recent infusion of money came on top of the $2.5 million Soros' Democracy PAC II had already funneled into the committee in the months of March and June, according to Fox News. Earlier this year, Fox News cited Federal Election Commission records to report that Democracy PAC II had donated $1 million to One Georgia on March 11. The outlet has also reported that the Soros-funded Democracy PAC II gave $1.5 million to One Georgia on June 23, according to a One Georgia contribution disclosure report — that report also notes the $1 million contribution from March.

Fox News also reported that the wealthy left-wing donor's daughter, Andrea Soros Colombel, gave One Georgia $100,000 in August, and that his daughter-in-law, Jennifer Allan Soros, gave $500 last month.

Soros has also given money directly to Abrams' campaign, according to Fox News, which earlier this year pointed to a campaign filing to report that Soros and two of his children had each given three donations to the campaign in January, which added up to $19,700 apiece.

Abrams lost the Peach State's 2018 gubernatorial election to Republican Brian Kemp, but the two are competing again during the 2022 contest as Abrams challenges the incumbent GOP governor.

Abrams has claimed that being pro-choice is part of her faith — Abrams said that "the decision to be pro-choice is exactly part of my faith. I cannot strike down another person's rights simply because I don't agree." She said that according to her faith, "you protect the vulnerable and you wrap them in your love."

In a 2018 campaign ad, Abrams said that according to her reading of scripture, "Jesus Christ was a progressive."

\u201cAs a woman of faith, I know that my faith should never be used as a sword to strike down others but instead as a shield to protect.\n\nI cannot strike down another person\u2019s rights simply because I don\u2019t agree.\u201d
— Stacey Abrams (@Stacey Abrams) 1656847800

Stacey Abrams loses again: Judge rejects suit claiming Georgia's 2018 election was mismanaged



When Republican Gov. Brian Kemp defeated Democrat Stacey Abrams in Georgia's 2018 gubernatorial election by 54,723 votes, Abrams refused to concede. She suggested that doing so would make her "complicit" in a "rigged" system. While the delta in votes was too large to legally warrant a recount, Abrams — who will again face Kemp in this year's election — sought other ways to contest the democratic result.

After the election, Abrams' Fair Fight Action organization filed a lawsuit, claiming Georgia had "grossly mismanaged" the election, depriving some citizens of their right to vote. In particular, the group took issue with two facets of the state's voter verification processes, both designed to counter voter fraud.

On Friday, U.S. District Judge Steve Jones in Atlanta rejected that lawsuit, finding for the defendants on all counts.

Rejected

Jones, appointed by former President Barack Obama, stated that although "Georgia's election system is not perfect, the challenged practices violate neither the constitution nor the [Voting Rights Act of 1965]."

The trial, which was decided by judge rather than by jury, took place over the course of two months and 21 trial days. Jones suggested it may have "been the longest voting rights bench trial in the history of the Northern District of Georgia."

One of the issues at the heart of the trial was Georgia's "exact match" policy, whereby the information on a voter registration application must comport with the records kept by Georgia's Department of Driver Services or the Social Security Administration.

In the event that there is not a match, the applicant is notified by letter from the county board of registrars that the application has been assigned a pending status. The application can be completed thereafter by way of the applicant providing sufficient evidence they are who they claim to be.

Abrams' group claimed that this requirement disproportionately affected minorities and immigrants and violated the U.S. Constitution and the Voting Rights Act.

Fair Fight attorney Allegra Lawrence-Hardy advanced the claim that Georgia officials had made it "harder to register, harder to stay registered and ultimately harder to vote" and intimated that requiring voters to have valid documentation on hand was "designed to keep certain people from voting."

In his 288-page decision, Jones stated that the "defendants have a compelling interest in preventing voter fraud" and that "the limited burdens placed on voters by Exact Match citizen verification are justified." Furthermore, Jones indicated that Fair Fight failed to prove the policy violated either the First or 14th Amendments.

According to Josh Belinfante, a lawyer for state election officials, Abrams' group was motivated by a desire to turn Georgia into a blue state. Belinfante indicated that among the over 3,000 stories cited by Fair Fight, only a handful were from persons unable to cast a ballot in the 2018 election. Not one reported having an issue in the 2020 election.

Gov. Brian Kemp said Friday's ruling "exposes this legal effort for what it really is: a tool wielded by a politician hoping to wrongfully weaponize the legal system to further her own political goals."

Although Jones ruled against all the claims brought by Fair Fight, Abrams said in a statement, "The conduct of this trial and preceding cases and legislative actions represent a hard-won victory for voters who have endured long lines, burdensome date of birth requirements and exact match laws that disproportionately impact Black and Brown voters."

\u201cThe conduct of this trial and preceding cases and legislative actions represent a hard-won victory for voters who endured long lines, burdensome date of birth requirements and exact match laws that disproportionately impact Black and Brown voters. 1/\u201d
— Stacey Abrams (@Stacey Abrams) 1664584619

Notwithstanding Abrams' characterization of another loss as a win, Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr suggested this rejection "is existential to who Stacey Abrams has become as a public and political figure."

"She put herself in the political spotlight nationally, potentially globally, all over the narrative that she lost the governor's race because of voter suppression," said Carr. "And here you have a federal judge saying, it's all untrue. It didn't happen."

Election denial

In a post-defeat speech on November 16, 2018, Abrams said, "I will not concede because the erosion of our democracy is not right."

Abrams, not opposed to criminal non-citizens voting in local elections, told MSNBC's Katy Tur that "the election was stolen from the people of Georgia."

On November 19, she told MSNBC's Chris Hayes that it was "not a free and fair election."

\u201cAt the #NANCONV2019, @staceyabrams says of her 2018 loss: "We won" \n\n"We had this little election back in 2018. And despite the final tally and the inauguration and the situation we find ourselves in, I do have very affirmative statement to make. We won.\u201d\u201d
— Tom Elliott (@Tom Elliott) 1554318659

Abrams later told the New York Times in 2019 that the "results were purely and fully attributable to voter suppression."

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who contested the results of the 2016 presidential election, was joined by numerous other Democrats, including former Attorney General Eric Holder, Vice President Kamala Harris, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, in reiterating Abrams' claim that the 2018 gubernatorial election had been stolen.

Clinton stumped for Abrams' election-denial narrative at a commemoration of Bloody Sunday in Selma, Alabama, suggesting, "Stacey Abrams should be governor, leading that state right now."

\u201cHillary Clinton goes off on voter suppression efforts: "Candidates both black and white lost their races because they have been deprived of the votes they otherwise would have gotten. And the clearest example is from next door in Georgia. Stacey Abrams should be governor."\u201d
— Kyle Griffin (@Kyle Griffin) 1551639623

Clinton also suggested that "you can run the best campaign, you can even become the nominee, and you can have the election stolen from you."

Kamala Harris stated, "Let's say this loud and clear: Without voter suppression, Stacey Abrams would be the governor of Georgia."

Election reality

It wasn't only U.S. District Judge Steve Jones who has cast doubt on Abrams' allegations of election mismanagement and voter suppression.

The Heritage Foundation noted that "Georgia was in full compliance with requirements of the National Voter Registration Act, which made it easy to register by mail, at the DMV, state public assistance offices, and at numerous other agencies and locations throughout the state."

In fact, it had never "been easier to register to vote in Georgia."

Ahead of the election in which Abrams lost, the state had nearly 7 million registered voters, "the most in Georgia's entire history."

In a 2018 post-election analysis, FiveThirtyEight indicated that voter turnout was "really big." Whereas on average, "roughly 40 percent of eligible voters cast a ballot in a midterm ... an estimated 55% of eligible voters exercised their right to vote, which is about 21 points higher than the state's 1982-2014 average."

As for the 1.4 million voters reportedly taken off the voter rolls between 2012 and 2018, PolitiFact reported, "Many died, moved away or lost their right to vote because they committed felonies." Some were removed because they skipped previous elections and "had no contact with the election officials."

Sherman further noted "that removal policy started in the 1990s under Democratic leadership."

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said, "Stolen election and voter suppression claims by Stacey Abrams were nothing but poll-tested rhetoric not supported by facts and evidence."

Stacey Abrams says being pro-choice is part of her faith, and according to her faith 'you protect the vulnerable and you wrap them in your love'



Democratic Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams has said that being pro-choice is a part of her faith.

In a video that she shared on social media last month, Abrams said that "the decision to be pro-choice is exactly part of my faith. I cannot strike down another person's rights simply because I don't agree."

And while abortion literally entails killing an unborn human being, Abrams also said that according to her faith, "you protect the vulnerable and you wrap them in your love."

\u201cAs a woman of faith, I know that my faith should never be used as a sword to strike down others but instead as a shield to protect.\n\nI cannot strike down another person\u2019s rights simply because I don\u2019t agree.\u201d
— Stacey Abrams (@Stacey Abrams) 1656847800

Abrams, who is facing off against incumbent Republican Gov. Brian Kemp during Georgia's 2022 governor's contest, previously lost the Peach State's 2018 gubernatorial election to Kemp. Abrams has previously served in the Georgia House of Representatives.

In a campaign ad posted in 2018, Abrams said that according to her reading of scripture, "Jesus Christ was a progressive."

Faith in Georgia youtu.be

During an interview with Yahoo! News on Sunday, Abrams discussed the issues of abortion and faith.

"It is a medical decision. And while your faith tradition may tell you that you personally do not want to make that choice, it is not my right as a Christian to impose that value system on someone else because the value that should overhang everything is the right to make our own decisions, the free will that the God I believe in gave us," Abrams said. "And my responsiblity as a legislator is to make certain that we allow doctors and nurses and medical professionals to make medical decisions and that politicians stay out of it."

When asked about restrictions on abortions, Abrams said that "arbitrary political parameters make no sense. But it should always be that abortion care is available until a fetus is viable unless that viability threatens" a mother's life, Abrams said.

Georgia law currently bans abortions after an unborn child's heartbeat is detected, with some exceptions.

Media outlets blame 2019 Georgia gun law for cancellation of Atlanta Music Midtown festival



Georgia's Music Midtown was trending on Twitter recently when rumors began to surface that it might get canceled. The yearly event was set to take place on September 17 and 18, featuring music from My Chemical Romance, Future, and Fallout Boy. The promoter, Live Nation, scheduled the event for Piedmont Park, a public park in downtown Atlanta.


\u201cMusic Midtown is about to be cancelled. My understanding is that it is because Georgia's gun laws make it impossible to bar firearms from Piedmont Park, a condition required by many artists' concert riders. An announcement is coming, I am told by a reliable source.\n\n#gapol\u201d
— George Chidi -- The Atlanta Objective (@George Chidi -- The Atlanta Objective) 1659113145

Yesterday, Music Midtown confirmed the rumors and announced the cancellation of the festival. Neither Live Nation nor Music Midtown have released a statement about why the event was called off. However, prevalent media outlets reported that Georgia gun laws prevent the promoter from legally banning firearms from the property during the event.


\u201cHey Midtown fans - due to circumstances beyond our control, Music Midtown will no longer be taking place this year. We were looking forward to reuniting in September and hope we can all get back to enjoying the festival together again soon.\u201d
— Music Midtown (@Music Midtown) 1659362407

Media outlets like Rolling Stone and Billboard reported that the cancellation is the fault of Georgia gun laws and 2A advocates. Specifically, the Safe Carry Protection Act expanded the ability to carry on state-owned land. Considering the law has been in place since 2019, the promoter should have been aware of the restrictions long before booking the venue.

Democratic Nominee for Governor of Georgia Stacey Abrams complained that the event's cancellation would cost the state's economy $50 million. She blamed Governor Brian Kemp for his "dangerous and extreme gun agenda" and stated, "It's shameful, but not surprising, that the governor cares more about protecting dangerous people carrying guns in public than saving jobs and keeping business in Georgia."


\u201cThe cancellation of Music Midtown will cost Georgia\u2019s economy $50 million.\n \nIt's shameful, but not surprising, that the governor cares more about protecting dangerous people carrying guns in public than saving jobs and keeping business in Georgia.\u201d
— Stacey Abrams (@Stacey Abrams) 1659390241

A pro-Second Amendment organization, GA2A, challenged Atlanta Botanical Garden at Piedmont Park in 2014 for enforcing a "gun-free zone" on state-owned land. Ultimately, Atlanta Botanical Garden won the case.

As part of that 2019 Supreme Court decision, Georgia's high court clarified the carry law – businesses with long-term leases on state-owned land, like Atlanta Botanical Garden, may enforce gun restrictions, and those with short-term leases may not.

Therefore, according to this 2019 ruling, two-day festivals like Music Midtown do not hold a long enough lease to enforce gun restrictions on the property.

Since the festival's launch in 1996, firearms have been banned from the event. In previous years, Music Midtown enforced illegal gun restrictions at Piedmont Park without consequence.

Stacey Abrams deletes photo of herself grinning unmasked in a classroom surrounded by young children forced to wear masks after being called out for breaking mask mandate



Democratic darling Stacey Abrams shared a photo of her unmasked in a classroom full of young children who were forced to wear face masks. However, the photo was removed from social media after Abrams was skewered for the awful optics and accused of engaging in hypocritical behavior of flouting a mask mandate.

On Friday, Abrams visited the Glennwood Elementary School outside of Atlanta, Georgia. Dr. Holly Brookins – the principal of Glennwood Elementary School – shared three photos of an unmasked Abrams on her Twitter account, which is no longer active.

The Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate retweeted the principal's tweet featuring photos of her at the school.

One photo shows a smiling Abrams without a mask in a classroom where every young child and school faculty member are wearing face masks. In another picture, an unmasked Abrams appears to hug a school faculty member who is wearing a mask. Abrams is seen without a mask delivering a speech to the students in another photo.

Have a feeling this photo\u2014which Abrams promoted on her own account\u2014of her appearing maskless surrounded by kids in masks is gonna be in a lot of ads this fall.pic.twitter.com/gYtDOMGTeK
— Alex Thompson (@Alex Thompson) 1644157136

However, by Saturday the photos were deleted.

These tweets \u2014 with a photo showing Stacey Abrams maskless surrounded by masked children & showing Abrams promoting it from her own account \u2014 have now both been removed. (Abrams deleted her own tweet and it appears that the original account has been deactivated or something).pic.twitter.com/qzzAPolsE2
— Jerry Dunleavy (@Jerry Dunleavy) 1644158659

The school is located in Decatur City, which recently extended its face mask mandate until February 22, 2022.

The photos of the grinning Democratic politician in a room full of masked children enraged many.

Georgia governor Brian Kemp (R): "Stacey Abrams wants state government mask mandates for Georgians and their children. But it looks like they wouldn’t apply when she’s attending a photo op."

National Review editor Rich Lowry: "Confirmation, if any were needed, that Stacey Abrams is a member of the Democratic elite in good standing—mask hypocrisy is practically a status symbol now."

Former Trump senior advisor Stephen Miller: "In so many ways, this picture embodies the elitism, arrogance, cruelty, science denial, and glib authoritarianism of Joe Biden’s Democrat Party."

Journalist Glenn Greenwald: "Meanwhile: since @staceyabrams is a very sophisticated and important liberal, I'm sure there's something in The Science™ that justifies her being maskless indoors, surrounded by young kids forced to wear masks all day. Maybe she's holding her breath?"

Republican candidate for Georgia's 6th congressional district Jake Evans: "Stacey Abrams is mask-less while all the children around her suffer. This is child abuse."

Conservative think tank American Principles Project: "Self-righteous politicians show off their smile as they force your children to be muzzled all day, set back years in their development, and carry the burden of a pandemic that was never at high risk to them."

Board-certified ophthalmologist and biomedical research scientist Houman David Hemmati: "This recent image of political activist @staceyabrams of Georgia (who is at VERY high risk for COVID death) sitting unmasked, with a huge wide grin, in front of forcibly masked kids whose smiles we/they will never see, exemplifies the hypocrisy of politicians."

Political strategist Justin Hart: "When Stacey Abrams runs for office again just plaster this picture on a billboard."

Washington Examiner executive editor Seth Mandel: "Stacey Abrams cutting an ad for her opponent is extremely weird I would not recommend this strategy."

Outkick founder Clay Travis: "The number of left wing politicians who post photos posing without masks while all the kids around them are wearing masks is stunning. Here is Stacey Abrams doing it. This is child abuse."

Political strategist Caleb Hull: "Stacey Abrams, who is obese and in the high risk category, not wearing a mask while children, who are in the lowest risk category, are all masked just about sums this whole pandemic up."

Communications director for Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-Ga.) – Madeline Corso: "Just to recap… Youngkin: anti-mandates & didn’t wear a mask in a VA grocery store where it’s optional. Abrams: pro-mandates & didn’t wear a mask in a GA school where children are forced to wear them There’s a reason only one of them is a governor—and the other never will be."

Talk show host Larry O'Connor: "Are these little children forced to wear masks to protect @staceyabrams? What kind of cruel monster makes little children cover their faces so they can have a photo op without fear of viral infection? If you're so afraid that you make kids wear masks around you, stay home!"

In the past, Abrams has told others to wear face masks.

As our nation\u2019s COVID death toll exceeds the 1918-19 Spanish flu, Georgia tragically has more than 20,000 souls in the number. We mourn their passing, and we should be doing more to save lives. Wear masks. Get vaccinated. Support healthcare workers w/more than rhetoric. Do right.
— Stacey Abrams (@Stacey Abrams) 1632250371


Wear a mask. Vote. \n\nGet yours herehttp://resistancebydesign.com/fair-fight\u00a0pic.twitter.com/MpQHm90lJJ
— Stacey Abrams (@Stacey Abrams) 1595797218
Wear a mask. Go to the polls. Cast your vote. Save our democracy. http://iwillvote.com\u00a0 \n\n: @kevloweryphotopic.twitter.com/SEvQfRj2xy
— Stacey Abrams (@Stacey Abrams) 1604434509

Democrat Stacey Abrams announces another bid for the Georgia governorship



Stacey Abrams, a Democrat who lost the 2018 Georgia governor's race to Republican Brian Kemp, has announced another gubernatorial bid in the Peach State.

"I’m running for Governor because opportunity in our state shouldn’t be determined by zip code, background or access to power," Abrams tweeted.

I\u2019m running for Governor because opportunity in our state shouldn\u2019t be determined by zip code, background or access to power. #gapol\n\nBe a founding donor to my campaign:\nhttps://secure.actblue.com/donate/afg22-tw?refcode=120121\u00a0\u2026pic.twitter.com/z14wUlo8ls
— Stacey Abrams (@Stacey Abrams) 1638390049

The former member of the Georgia House of Representatives lost the 2018 contest to Kemp by a margin of less than 1.4 percentage points, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution.

If Kemp manages to secure the GOP nomination, and Abrams locks up the Democratic nomination, the two could face off once again during the state's 2022 gubernatorial contest.

While Trump campaigned for Kemp in 2018, according to the Associated Press, he has become a vociferous critic of the current governor, which could prove problematic for Kemp as he heads into the GOP primary contest. Trump has said that he will campaign against Kemp.

A victory for Abrams would be historic, as she would become the state's first black governor and the first black female elected governor in American history, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution.

Joe Biden won the state during the 2020 presidential contest, marking the first time a Democrat took the Peach State during a presidential election since 1992.

Then in January of 2021, Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock won U.S. Senate election runoffs in the state. Warnock, who won a special election runoff, is up for re-election in 2022.

"With Stacey Abrams in control, Georgia would have shut down, students would have been barred from their classrooms, and woke politics would be the law of the land and the lesson plan in our schools," Gov. Kemp tweeted. "Next November’s election for Governor is a battle for the soul of our state. I’m in the fight against Stacey Abrams, the failed Biden agenda, and their woke allies to keep Georgia the best place to live, work, and raise a family."

Her far-left agenda of open borders, gun confiscation, high taxes, and anti-law enforcement policies don\u2019t reflect who we are as Georgians.
— Brian Kemp (@Brian Kemp) 1638390606

Church cited after maskless pastor — who's alone in building — answers door for health official. Warnings of closure, fines, jail time follow.



A Pasadena, Maryland, church was cited recently after the pastor — who was alone in the building during office hours — answered the church door without wearing a mask for a health department official, who was making an unannounced visit, the American Constitutional Rights Union said.

What are the details?

After issuing the citation, the Anne Arundel County Department of Health official told the Rev. Dennis Jackman that he would return, and if Community United Methodist Church in Pasadena was not in full compliance with COVID-19 guidance that the church would be deemed an "unsafe facility" and "closed until the state of emergency has been terminated," the ACRU added.

The citation also warned of criminal charges and "imprisonment of up to one year, and/or a fine of up to $5,000," the organization noted, despite the church following all county guidance for services and making an effort to ensure the safety of worshipers.

What did the ACRU have to say?

ACRU President Lori Roman took Maryland officials to task: "Within the span of a week, Governor [Larry] Hogan has signed an executive order releasing prisoners, citing COVID, and health departments across the state have been unleashed to threaten and harass pastors and churches. The entire country is watching this juxtaposition of principles and priorities."

What did the pastor have to say?

"I was in my office alone, without a mask on, and heard someone at the locked door of the church," Jackman told the ACRU. "I was not expecting anyone, so I went to see who was trying to get in the church. Immediately after answering the door, I went to my desk and put on my mask, but the health official seemed intent on finding something worthy of a citation."

The pastor also appeared Tuesday on Fox News' "Tucker Carlson Tonight," and the host said the county health department told the program that it had been receiving complaints about the congregation engaging in "hand shaking, high fives, and fist bumps" — which Carlson mockingly referred to as "illicit worship."

Jackman told Carlson he hadn't heard of such complaints, that the church has been taking numerous steps to keep visitors safe — and that he's been preaching his sermons from the back of a truck in the parking lot.

Pastor given citation after anonymous complaints of 'fist bumps' joins 'Tucker'youtu.be

Anything else?

Jackman isn't the first Maryland pastor to square off with local government over church services amid coronavirus restrictions.

Back in May, Stacey Shiflett — pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Dundalk — read from an "intimidating" cease-and-desist letter he said he received from Baltimore County's Department of Health and Human Services, warning that the church "could be subject to a fine of up to $5,000" if further in-person services were held in violation of executive orders.

Well, Shiflett went right ahead and not only held a Wednesday night service for 100 attendees in the 600-capacity sanctuary, Fox News reported — but also he tore up the cease-and-desist letter in the middle of his sermon.

https://t.co/klOrD2Bgn7
— Stacey Shiflett 🇺🇸 (@Stacey Shiflett 🇺🇸)1590060140.0

"Pharaoh doesn't get to dictate to God's people how they worship their God," Shiflett said with a raised voice. "God's the one that defines the parameters, God's the one that communicates his will and his plan for his church — not Egypt."

During that period of time, Rev. Alvin Gwynn — pastor of Friendship Baptist Church in Baltimore City — had harsh words for Democratic Baltimore Mayor Jack Young, who was keeping the city under a stay-at-home order even though Gov. Hogan said restrictions could be loosened.

"We got a mayor saying we can only worship in our parking lots, which is ridiculous," Gwynn said.