| Democrat money laundering operation helped to steal a Senate seat from MAGA Kari Lake. 
 arizonasuntimes.com
 
 Some election integrity researchers are expanding their  investigation of politicians who benefitted from questionable “Smurfing”  campaign contributions and discovered that Senator Ruben Gallego (D-AZ)  received many of them. Smurfing refers to using straw donors to make  campaign contributions; usually, elderly and unemployed people are  unaware their identities are being used for money laundering. Many  contributions are made under one name, sometimes thousands of them, and  they are usually small amounts, often around $10 each, to escape  detection.
 
 The Smurfing appears to be usually run through ActBlue, the Democrats’ fundraising platform, although it has also been spotted on the Republican side in recent years through their WinRed fundraising platform.
 
 Experts  say they believe Democratic operatives are conducting the Smurfing to  hide illegal donations from foreigners, corporations, unions, or  individuals who have exceeded contribution limits. Investigative  journalist James O’Keefe took videos of himself talking to some of the  Smurfs, mostly elderly and retired people of modest means who admitted  they did not know about the large numbers of campaign contributions in  their names.
 
 Massachusetts donors gave Gallego more than twice as much money as Arizonans did last March.  The $8 million from Massachusetts donors came through ActBlue, with  Gallego receiving $17 million in total. Carolyn Wren, a senior advisor  to his Republican opponent Kari Lake, found other oddities, including  unemployed Virginia Smith donating to Gallego 57 times.
 
 Gallego  significantly outraised Lake in the Senate race. The vast majority of  his funding came from out of state, and much of it appears to have been  laundered through ActBlue. He raised approximately $36 million in 2024,  while Lake raised approximately $17 million.
 
 Congress is  investigating ActBlue and Smurfing. Then-Senator Marco Rubio sent a  complaint letter to the FEC regarding ActBlue’s failure to require CCV  numbers to process credit card donations. ActBlue agreed to require  them. In October 2024, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton petitioned the  FEC to take immediate action to “close fundraising loopholes that  jeopardize American election integrity” following his investigation into  the Democrat fundraising platform ActBlue. In August, South Carolina  Attorney General Alan Wilson sent a letter to the CEO of ActBlue about  the Smurfing allegations. Last fall, 19 state attorneys general began  investigating ActBlue.
 
 Tom
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