Republican Party of San Diego County

6.9K posts

Republican Party of San Diego County banner
Republican Party of San Diego County

Republican Party of San Diego County

@RPSDC

We seek a better future for San Diego County and the State of California. Safer communities; justice; election integrity; respect for enduring values. #RPSDC

San Diego County, California Tham gia Ekim 2009
866 Đang theo dõi3.7K Người theo dõi
Republican Party of San Diego County
Bill Essayli and Harmeet Dhillon are on the case.
F.A. United States Attorney Bill Essayli@USAttyEssayli

California Is Blocking a Federal Audit of Its Voter Rolls California allows first-time voters to register using forms of ID that most Americans would find surprising, including: -Gym membership card -Employer ID card -Credit or debit card -Prescription drug label -Insurance card (California provides free health coverage to undocumented immigrants) Full list: sos.ca.gov/elections/hava… This is permitted when a voter fails to provide a Social Security number or driver’s license at registration. Our office believes this policy deserves a closer look. We also have serious concerns about how California maintains its voter rolls. There are open questions about whether the state is promptly removing deceased voters, people who have moved, and individuals convicted of disqualifying felonies. On top of that, California allows third parties to collect and turn in ballots on voters’ behalf (a practice known as ballot harvesting) with few restrictions. This makes it difficult to track who actually received, completed, and submitted each ballot. For over a year, the Department of Justice has been trying to audit California’s voter rolls. Federal law gives the Attorney General the authority to review state voter files and confirm that only eligible U.S. citizens are voting in federal elections. @AAGDhillon sent California a letter explaining our legal authority. California refused to comply, claiming state privacy laws block the review, an argument that does not hold up because those laws don’t apply to the federal government in this context. We’ve sued California in federal court, and the case is before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. If California genuinely wants voters to trust its elections, it should open its records, not fight to keep them closed. What are they afraid of?

English
0
2
1
156
Republican Party of San Diego County
What follows is the text of a Facebook post by "Wallace L. Garneau". (A link to the post is included below the text.): Let's talk about the LA mayor race. I ran the math on this. The statistical likelihood of Nithya Raman going from 18% of the vote on election day and early on June 3-4, to 58% of ballots from June 4-5, is essentially zero. For a result to be THREE sigma off the mean you are looking at a one in a million chance. This is 380 sigma. The likelihood of that happening randomly is one chance in ten with 31,358 zeros after the ten. It's statistically impossible by a margin that I can't even write. That's not one in 31,358. It is one in 10,000,000,000,000,000,000 - and keep adding more zeros until you have 31,358 of them. If we were talking about one box of ballots, you might argue that Raman did very well in a particular neighborhood. Maybe it was the neighborhood she lives in. But we are not talking about one box of ballots. We are talking about every single ballot that arrived over that 24 hour window. Those ballots are coming from all over the city, so this should be pretty close to a random distribution. Now, there is an important caveat. My statistical conclusion, while accurate, depends on the assumption that the June 4-5 ballots came from the same underlying voter population as the earlier ballots. What exactly were those ballots? Where did they come from? What was the voting population and why was it so radically different from the rest of Los Angeles, when the differentiator is only the date they arrived? The magnitude of the shift is so large that it cannot reasonably be explained as ordinary statistical variation. Either the later ballots came from a dramatically different voter population, or something else occurred that requires explanation. One obvious hypothesis for why those ballots could look like a completely separate population is that there could be a lot of fraudulent ballots mixed in - roughly 2.5 times as many fraudulent ballots for Raman as legitimate ones. If you take the exact same numbers for Pratt and Bass, and divide Raman's totals for that period by 2.5, suddenly the statistical variation goes away. It does not just narrow. It closes entirely. This makes it look like someone did the math, saw how many ballots had to be stuffed in for Raman to guarantee her a spot in the runoff, and stuffed that number of ballots into the mix. Does anyone have any other possible explanations? If so, I'm all ears, because it does not look like California is even trying to hide it anymore. This looks painfully obvious. A few days before the election, Gavin Newsome told the press to calm down, as he has a 'break the glass scenario' he can employ if necessary. This looks a lot like a 'break the glass' scenario, and all it implies. Before dismissing questions about the results, election officials need to explain why one reporting period looked so radically different from the ballots counted before it, or after it, because it looks to me like Karen Bass did not want to run head-to-head against Spencer Pratt after being destroyed by him on a debate stage so savagely as to not show up for the next debate. m.facebook.com/story.php?stor…
Republican Party of San Diego County tweet media
English
0
1
0
95
Republican Party of San Diego County
It seems Karoline Leavitt is back on the job.
🇺🇸RealRobert🇺🇸@Real_RobN

Here it is: U.S. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt: “I’m happy to provide you all of the evidence.” Gov. Gavin Newscum is under criminal review for signing up illegal aliens to vote through his criminal conspiracy—AB 37, universal mail-in ballots. @PressSec: “I’m happy to provide you all of the evidence for it. I’d be glad to send that to you after this briefing. Fraudulent ballots are being mailed in in the names of other people, in the names of illegal aliens who shouldn’t be voting in American elections. There are countless examples, and we’d be happy to provide them…” 📝 PASS THE SAVE ACT: How many fraudulent mail in ballots are being counted during the California rigged 2026 primary election? The Democrats have banned voter ID across the country, but issues driver’s licenses to 20 million illegal aliens they’ve imported.

English
0
1
2
98
Republican Party of San Diego County đã retweet
Amy Reichert
Amy Reichert@amyforsandiego·
Skid Row junkies in Los Angeles don’t need a drivers license or social security number to register to vote. All they need is a prescription bottle. We have a right and a duty to call out election fraud in California. We won’t be silenced.
English
25
153
553
6.5K
Republican Party of San Diego County
"Trump has a sense of humor, and his critics generally don’t. Thus, they often fail to understand when Trump is putting them on... "[T]he hilarious point is that the photo of Trump used on the hypothetical mockup–Bessent said that Treasury was just being prepared, in case Congress does decree a $250 bill–is the mug shot that was taken in connection with one of the Democrats’ failed criminal prosecutions of the President." powerlineblog.com/archives/2026/…
Republican Party of San Diego County tweet media
English
0
1
0
91
Republican Party of San Diego County
"All modern human societies and every meaningful invention has occurred during the current Holocene warm interglacial period, beginning 11,700 years ago. The previous warm interglacial was the Eemian (130,000 to 115,000 years ago). Temperatures in the Eemian were also 2°C warmer than today and African megafauna and crocodiles lived in the Thames valley. "The generally accepted average extent of ice age interglacials is around 15,000 years. "So perhaps we should be considering our next move if the next glaciation comes early."
Peter Clack@PeterDClack

Any return to ice age conditions could trigger a crisis unmatched in all human history. Earth is still technically in an ice age and average global temperatures of around 15°C degrees are still much lower than the long-term global average of 16°C to 18°C A global warming scare has been running for 40 years, yet 10% of the world's total land area is still covered by glacial ice. From a human perspective, the combined land area of every town and city on earth is still only 3% of the total. Ice covers an area of 15 million square kilometers (5.8 million square miles), roughly a third of its full extent during the peak of the Last Glacial Maximum (26,000 to 19,000 years ago). This was the most recent time in Earth's history when global ice sheets were at their greatest extent. The Antarctic ice sheet is still the largest and thickest ice formation on Earth by far, reaching up to 4.8 kilometres (about 3 miles) in depth. It holds 90% of the world's ice by volume & accounts for around 85% of total global glacial ice cover. Antarctica spans roughly 14 million square kilometers (5.4 million square miles) and covers about 8.3% of the total land surface. Land area is only 28% of earth's surface. The oceans cover 72% to an average depth of 2.3 miles, forests cover 31% and deserts 33%. The oceans contain 86% of the global carbon reservoir and 91% of all retained heat energy; by contrast, the atmosphere holds a mere 1 to 2% of each. The past 40 years has featured a global warming campaign raising fears of an impending climate crisis, chiefly based on forecasts of soaring temperatures and a global climate crisis. However, the fact remains that the Earth is still technically in an ice age, with ice cover at both poles all year round. We still live in the Quaternary Glaciation, which has lasted 2.58 million years. The Quaternary Glaciation is a more severely cold extension of the Late Cenozoic Ice Age, which has lasted for 34 million years, since the time of the original glaciation of Antarctica. The chief causes were due to orbital anomalies (the Milankovitch cycles), the isolation of the Antarctic continent when Australia and South America shifted northward, as part of global tectonic changes. The last great ice age that was similar to today was the Karoo Ice Age (also known as the Late Paleozoic Icehouse), spanning approximately 360 to 260 million years. This is one of the five major ice ages in Earth's history. All modern human societies and every meaningful invention has occurred during the current Holocene warm interglacial period, beginning 11,700 years ago. The previous warm interglacial was the Eemian (130,000 to 115,000 years ago). Temperatures in the Eemian were also 2°C warmer than today and African megafauna and crocodiles lived in the Thames valley. The generally accepted average extent of ice age interglacials is around 15,000 years. So perhaps we should be considering our next move if the next glaciation comes early.

English
0
0
0
188
Republican Party of San Diego County đã retweet
Rep. Ken Calvert
Rep. Ken Calvert@KenCalvert·
Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but the gas tax is going up thanks to Democrats in Sacramento. The reason gas is more expensive in California than any other state in the country is because of policies put in place by Democrats.
Ashley Zavala@ZavalaA

California sends out its annual notice that the state’s gas tax is going up another 2 cents. The state’s gas tax will be 63.4 cents per gallon of regular starting July 1.

English
9
7
19
1.3K