WHY WOULD AN ELECTION FIRM BE DUMPING PILES OF CASH INTO DEMOCRAT COFFERS?
All the political donations made by employees of Konnech – the election management company whose CEO was recently arrested for allegedly storing information on election workers on servers in China – went to support Democratic candidates, The National Pulse can reveal.
The unearthed political associations of the company, according to a Federal Election Commission (FEC) database, follows the arrest of Konnech CEO Eugene Yu. The Michigan-based company, which managed software responsible for organizing poll workers in Los Angeles County, is now “part of an investigation into the possible theft of personal identifying information of those workers,” according to authorities.
The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office explained that the firm was “supposed to securely maintain the data and that only United States citizens and permanent residents have access to it,” but instead secretly stored it on servers in China.
The National Pulse can also reveal nearly 50 political donations made by Konnech staff, including Eugene Yu, which exclusively went to Democratic candidates. 49 donations totaling $1,897.69 came from three employees in addition to Yu: Business Development Manager Laura Potter; Product Director Eric Staats; and Chief Operation Officer Aaron Brown.
PART OF KONNECH’S DONATIONS.
Brown, for example, made a $75 donation to President Joe Biden’s campaign on October 30th, 2020 despite the fact the firm has received federal and state grants to assist with election infrastructure since 2010. Staats donated twice to the 2020 presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders.
Other candidates that have enjoyed support from Konnech include...
Read More HERE
No money, no election info or USA people info, ballot and voting machine info should be going from outside this country either way. If any government official either elected or hired is involved they should be removed.
ReplyDeleteFreedom of the Press should only be good if the Media is 100% USA owned and that includes the companies under Article 230 for the Internet.
Why would ANY firm involved in election machinery, software, or voting information be allowed to make political contributions to anyone? Seems like the potential for conflict of interest is huge.
ReplyDelete