Action Steps

BALLOT SECURITY NOW!

DOCKET NO. 244 M.D. 2021 | McLinko Vs Pennsylvania

On January 28, 2022 the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania found in favor of the plaintiff in Doug McLinko vs Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.  In short, “no excuse” mail-in balloting has been found unconstitutional in Pennsylvania.  Bradford County, Pennsylvania commissioner Doug McLinko is the lead plaintiff along with several state representatives and local GOP county committees who joined the case. The establishment Republicans and Democrats of the state all supported the law to allow the flood of hundreds of thousands of mail in ballots that had a dramatic impact on the 2020 presidential election. That year, Pennsylvania voted for Joe Biden.  At least, that’s how it appears.  Doug is a principled conservative from rural Pennsylvania, a dedicated public servant for two decades.   As the legislature told voters and local elected members of election boards to “sit down and shut up” he chose to fight for our constitutional rights instead.  Join his fight to return the ballot box back to the voters. For more info, go to https://ballotsecuritynow.org/.

2022-04-07T02:06:44+00:00April 7th, 2022|Action Steps|0 Comments

PENNSYLVANIA ELECTION INTEGRITY SUMMIT

Thursday, March 31, 2022

Penn Harris Hotel

Camp Hill, PA 17011

  • Forming State and Local Election Integrity Task Forces
  • Protecting Vulnerable Voters
  • Recruiting & Training Election Workers & Poll Watchers
  • Citizen Oversight of Voting Software, Equipment & Systems
  • Cleaning Voter Rolls
  • Understanding Absentee Voting, Recent Court Decisions about No Excuse Absentee Voting in PA, & the Role of US Post Office in Election Mail
  • AND MORE!!
2022-02-07T06:38:20+00:00February 7th, 2022|Action Steps|0 Comments

SIGN PETITION for Statewide Referendum re REVOKING ACT 77/MAIL-IN VOTING in PA!

Senate Bill 884, initiated by Senator Mastriano, and co-sponsored by Senators Brooks, Hutchinson, Mensch, Pittman, Stefano, and Judy Ward, would enact a ballot referendum to repeal provisions of Act 77, which mandated fraud-ridden “no-excuse” mail-in voting in the Commonwealth. If passed by both the Senate and House of Representatives in 2 consecutive sessions, the referendum will appear on the May 2023 Ballot.

These ballot questions would allow voters to determine the following changes to election law: • Elimination of “No-Excuse” mail in voting • Mandatory deadline for mailed ballots to be received by 5pm the Friday before Election Day • Mandatory signature verification for all mailed ballots • Elimination of the permanent “mail-in/absentee voter list.” A sitting Governor will not be able to veto this legislation prior to its appearance on the ballot.

Since for many decades, mail-in voting has been known to provide rampant opportunities for election fraud, it is banned in most countries throughout the world. (For more info, see “Repeal Act 77” article.)


2021-11-06T03:03:19+00:00November 6th, 2021|Action Steps|0 Comments

URGENT QUESTIONS in PA May 18 Primary Election!

By Richard A. Panzer, PhD

 When Pennsylvania voters head to the polls on Tuesday, May 18, for the primary election, they will find three important questions on the ballot regarding amendments to the state Constitution. The first two constitutional questions deal with disaster emergency declarations while the third addresses racial equality. 

Why Are These Questions Important?
For more than a year, Pennsylvania has been operating under two long-term disaster emergency declarations imposed by Gov. Tom Wolf. One declaration is related to the opioid epidemic and has been in place for more than three years, while the other was ordered in March 2020 at the start of the pandemic. The governor renewed the COVID-19 declaration for a fourth time in February.

On Tuesday, May 18, voters will have a say in the duration of future disaster emergency declarations under legislation approved by the General Assembly. Senate Bill 2 proposes to amend the state Constitution regarding disaster declarations in two ways: limiting emergency declarations by a governor to a maximum of 21 days without legislative approval and clarifying that a concurrent resolution terminating or extending a disaster emergency declaration need not be presented to the governor for his signature.

While executive powers to declare emergencies […]

2021-04-23T20:05:59+00:00April 23rd, 2021|Action Steps|0 Comments