Board of Elections seeks to spend grant funds
By Kyle Shaner - kshaner@sidneydailynews.com
SIDNEY – Working to ensure it utilizes available funds before upcoming deadlines, the Shelby County Board of Elections made plans to spend grant money during its Dec. 21 meeting.
The Board of Elections has funds available from two grants – a Center for Tech and Civic Life grant and a Help America Vote Act grant.
With the Center for Tech and Civic Life grant, the board voted to spend approximately $5,744 on training projection equipment.
Board of Elections officials previously discussed purchasing a television monitor for their training needs. However, after consulting with the county’s information technology department and viewing projection systems at other local agencies, Director Pam Kerrigan said a projection system would be a better option. The screen is easier to read from a distance, she said, and the projector lasts 20,000 hours.
A flood of tax-exempt money from the Facebook founder gave Dems an unfair and illegal advantage. Tue Dec 22, 2020 Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife helped buy the presidency for the increasingly frail and feeble former Vice President Joe Biden by improperly influencing election officials as they strategically flooded left-wing activist groups with more than $400 million during the 2020 election cycle. Those groups, in turn, gave huge grants to election administrators in order to create “a two-tiered election system that treated voters differently depending on whether they lived in Democrat or Republican strongholds,” Phill Kline, director of the Amistad Project of the Thomas More Society, a public interest law firm focused on religious freedom, wrote in a new report.
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife helped buy the presidency for the increasingly frail and feeble former Vice President Joe Biden by improperly influencing election officials as they strategically flooded left-wing activist groups with more than $400 million during the 2020 election cycle.
Those groups, in turn, gave huge grants to election administrators in order to create âa two-tiered election system that treated voters differently depending on whether they lived in Democrat or Republican strongholds,â Phill Kline, director of the Amistad Project of the Thomas More Society, a public interest law firm focused on religious freedom, wrote in a new report.
AP Photo/Susan Walsh
A report by the election integrity watchdog Amistad Project alleges that Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg and his wife made $419.5 million in contributions to non-profit organizations during the 2020 election cycle, including $350 million to the “Safe Elections” Project of the Center for Technology and Civic Life, that “improperly influence[d] the 2020 presidential election on behalf of one particular candidate and party,” as reported by Breitbart on Friday.
REPORT: Zuckerberg used money in violation of Federal election law https://t.co/kgnfuYDU1w
In the report’s executive summary, Project Director Phill Kline said Zuckerberg and other high-tech interests, and activist organizations created a two-tiered election system.