Has the Democrat(ic) party become the party of fraud?

T. A. Gardner

Serial Thread Killer
Have the Democrats become the party of fraud? It sure seems that way with them defending and trying to obstruct its being stopped in places like Minnesota and California. Now the Democrats are defending the SPLC handing millions to Rightwing hate groups to foment more hate from them. In California they're trying to pass laws to stop anyone from investigating fraud or potential fraud.
 


1) “Have Democrats become the party of fraud?”​


❌ Not a factual statement — it is a political framing​


This is:


  • a broad generalization about an entire political party
  • not something that can be proven or disproven in any objective sense
  • built on selective examples rather than systematic evidence

There is no credible dataset or academic consensus showing that:


one U.S. political party is “the party of fraud”

Fraud cases in the U.S. (public or private sector) occur:


  • across political parties
  • across states
  • across administrations

Example context:


  • Minnesota has had large fraud cases (e.g., Feeding Our Future scandal)
  • California has also had fraud cases in multiple programs
    But these are localized criminal cases, not evidence of partisan identity.



2) “Democrats are defending or obstructing fraud investigations in Minnesota and California”​


⚠ Mixed / context-dependent, but overstated​


Minnesota:​


  • There have been real fraud cases involving state programs (including COVID-era funding misuse)
  • State officials have:
    • supported investigations in some cases
    • implemented tighter oversight afterward

✔ Reality: enforcement + political debate both exist
❌ Not evidence of systematic “protection of fraud”




California:​


Your claim refers to “stopping investigations into fraud”


What actually exists in public records:


  • California has ongoing disputes over election integrity investigations and ballot access rules
  • Courts have sometimes:
    • allowed investigations
    • blocked specific procedures
  • These are usually legal/constitutional disputes, not blanket bans on fraud investigation

Example:


  • courts blocking or modifying certain county-level ballot review efforts does not equal “preventing fraud investigations statewide”



3) “Democrats are defending SPLC giving money to right-wing hate groups”​


❌ Misleading / based on contested allegations​


Recent reporting shows:


  • The SPLC has been indicted on federal fraud charges for allegedly paying informants inside extremist groups
  • The SPLC says:
    • these were undercover informant payments for intelligence gathering
    • not “support” of those groups

Key point:


  • This is a legal dispute, not a confirmed finding of “funding hate groups to promote hate”

Also:


  • It is not accurate that “Democrats are defending it” as a unified position
  • Responses vary widely across individuals and institutions



4) “California is trying to pass laws to stop investigation of fraud”​


⚠ Overgeneralized / not supported as stated​


California legislation commonly involves:


  • election administration rules
  • privacy protections
  • data handling standards
  • limits on harassment or misuse of voter data

But:


  • there is no broad law or credible legislative agenda whose purpose is “stopping fraud investigations”

What often happens in practice:


  • disputes over how investigations are conducted
  • court challenges over scope, access, or privacy

That is different from banning investigations entirely.




5) Overall bias analysis​


This statement contains several classic rhetorical patterns:


1. Partisan labeling


“party of fraud”

Turns complex, distributed problems into identity-based blame.


2. Conflation


Combines unrelated issues:


  • Minnesota fraud cases
  • California legal disputes
  • SPLC indictment allegations
    → into a single coordinated narrative

3. Motivational framing


Assumes intent:


  • “defending fraud”
  • “trying to obstruct investigations”
    without proving coordinated intent

4. False generalization


Moves from:


  • real incidents (fraud cases exist)
    to:
  • systemic party-wide behavior (not supported)



Bottom line​


  • ✔ Fraud exists in government programs across states and parties
  • ✔ Minnesota and California have had real fraud-related controversies
  • ✔ SPLC is currently facing serious legal allegations (not settled facts)
  • ❌ No evidence supports the claim that Democrats as a party are “the party of fraud”
  • ❌ No evidence of coordinated efforts to broadly block fraud investigations
  • ❌ SPLC allegations do not equal confirmed “funding hate groups to spread hate”
 


1) “Have Democrats become the party of fraud?”​


❌ Not a factual statement — it is a political framing​


This is:


  • a broad generalization about an entire political party
  • not something that can be proven or disproven in any objective sense
  • built on selective examples rather than systematic evidence

There is no credible dataset or academic consensus showing that:




Fraud cases in the U.S. (public or private sector) occur:


  • across political parties
  • across states
  • across administrations

Example context:


  • Minnesota has had large fraud cases (e.g., Feeding Our Future scandal)
  • California has also had fraud cases in multiple programs
    But these are localized criminal cases, not evidence of partisan identity.



2) “Democrats are defending or obstructing fraud investigations in Minnesota and California”​


⚠ Mixed / context-dependent, but overstated​


Minnesota:​


  • There have been real fraud cases involving state programs (including COVID-era funding misuse)
  • State officials have:
    • supported investigations in some cases
    • implemented tighter oversight afterward

✔ Reality: enforcement + political debate both exist
❌ Not evidence of systematic “protection of fraud”




California:​


Your claim refers to “stopping investigations into fraud”


What actually exists in public records:


  • California has ongoing disputes over election integrity investigations and ballot access rules
  • Courts have sometimes:
    • allowed investigations
    • blocked specific procedures
  • These are usually legal/constitutional disputes, not blanket bans on fraud investigation

Example:


  • courts blocking or modifying certain county-level ballot review efforts does not equal “preventing fraud investigations statewide”



3) “Democrats are defending SPLC giving money to right-wing hate groups”​


❌ Misleading / based on contested allegations​


Recent reporting shows:


  • The SPLC has been indicted on federal fraud charges for allegedly paying informants inside extremist groups
  • The SPLC says:
    • these were undercover informant payments for intelligence gathering
    • not “support” of those groups

Key point:


  • This is a legal dispute, not a confirmed finding of “funding hate groups to promote hate”

Also:


  • It is not accurate that “Democrats are defending it” as a unified position
  • Responses vary widely across individuals and institutions



4) “California is trying to pass laws to stop investigation of fraud”​


⚠ Overgeneralized / not supported as stated​


California legislation commonly involves:


  • election administration rules
  • privacy protections
  • data handling standards
  • limits on harassment or misuse of voter data

But:


  • there is no broad law or credible legislative agenda whose purpose is “stopping fraud investigations”

What often happens in practice:


  • disputes over how investigations are conducted
  • court challenges over scope, access, or privacy

That is different from banning investigations entirely.




5) Overall bias analysis​


This statement contains several classic rhetorical patterns:


1. Partisan labeling




Turns complex, distributed problems into identity-based blame.


2. Conflation


Combines unrelated issues:


  • Minnesota fraud cases
  • California legal disputes
  • SPLC indictment allegations
    → into a single coordinated narrative

3. Motivational framing


Assumes intent:


  • “defending fraud”
  • “trying to obstruct investigations”
    without proving coordinated intent

4. False generalization


Moves from:


  • real incidents (fraud cases exist)
    to:
  • systemic party-wide behavior (not supported)



Bottom line​


  • ✔ Fraud exists in government programs across states and parties
  • ✔ Minnesota and California have had real fraud-related controversies
  • ✔ SPLC is currently facing serious legal allegations (not settled facts)
  • ❌ No evidence supports the claim that Democrats as a party are “the party of fraud”
  • ❌ No evidence of coordinated efforts to broadly block fraud investigations
  • ❌ SPLC allegations do not equal confirmed “funding hate groups to spread hate”
That’s Maralago’s latest strategy heading into the midterms, portraying Democrats as criminals, enablers of fraud, kinda like an updated version of 2016. Ice killed their immigration Armageddon theme, Iran the endless wars bullshit, and it’s not Trump running against a women so the misogyny whistles aren’t applicable, so their reaching
 
Have the Democrats become the party of fraud? It sure seems that way with them defending and trying to obstruct its being stopped in places like Minnesota and California. Now the Democrats are defending the SPLC handing millions to Rightwing hate groups to foment more hate from them. In California they're trying to pass laws to stop anyone from investigating fraud or potential fraud.
Got to admit it is humorous, the GOP accusing Democrats of enabling fraud when their head is the only President to actually be convicted of fraud let alone fined or settling out of Court for fraud. As I’ve said relating to lying it is like a Bernie Madoff loyalist accusing another of being a thief
 
Have the Democrats become the party of fraud? It sure seems that way with them defending and trying to obstruct its being stopped in places like Minnesota and California. Now the Democrats are defending the SPLC handing millions to Rightwing hate groups to foment more hate from them. In California they're trying to pass laws to stop anyone from investigating fraud or potential fraud.
No, they have not become the party of fraud, they've always been the party of fraud.
 
That’s Maralago’s latest strategy heading into the midterms, portraying Democrats as criminals, enablers of fraud, kinda like an updated version of 2016. Ice killed their immigration Armageddon theme, Iran the endless wars bullshit, and it’s not Trump running against a women so the misogyny whistles aren’t applicable, so their reaching
Got to get everybody thinking about other things and not the Epstein files, and the economy going into a recession / depression .
Make up a bunch of lies tell the MAGA morons they are true and watch the BS start flying.
 
Roughly 85% of the fraud is coming from Democrats and Lefties. But there is enough GOP / Conservatives participating in the fraud, to call it a bi-partisan problem.


The same list of GOP members who just voted against the Save Act are the GOP members who are profiting from, and participating in the massive fraud.




"Sens. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine, and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky all voted no."


These four need to be primaried and replaced with Patriot GOP legislators.


-
 
Roughly 85% of the fraud is coming from Democrats and Lefties. But there is enough GOP / Conservatives participating in the fraud, to call it a bi-partisan problem.


The same list of GOP members who just voted against the Save Act are the GOP members who are profiting from, and participating in the massive fraud.




"Sens. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine, and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky all voted no."


These four need to be primaried and replaced with Patriot GOP legislators.


-

Claim 1: “Roughly 85% of the fraud is coming from Democrats and Lefties”


  • There is no credible, nonpartisan evidence to support this figure. Claims about 85% of voter fraud being tied to Democrats are unsubstantiated.
  • Multiple studies, including by the Brennan Center for Justice and government investigations, find that voter fraud in the U.S. is extremely rare—typically well under 1% of votes cast—and not reliably linked to one party.
  • Broad partisan assignments of fraud percentages are misleading and not supported by verified data.



Claim 2: “The same list of GOP members who just voted against the SAVE Act are the GOP members who are profiting from, and participating in the massive fraud.”


  • The article you cited reports that Senators Tillis, Murkowski, Collins, and McConnell voted against the SAVE Act amendment.
  • There is no evidence connecting these senators personally to “massive fraud” or personal profit from voter fraud.
  • This statement is political commentary/opinion, not factual reporting. Fact-checking organizations like PolitiFact or FactCheck.org have not substantiated such claims.



Claim 3: “Four GOP senators need to be primaried and replaced with Patriot GOP legislators.”


  • This is clearly an opinion/advocacy statement, not a factual claim.



On the SAVE Act vote


  • The SAVE Act amendment (requiring voter ID for federal elections) did see 4 Republicans vote no along with all Democrats, per the Washington Digest article.
  • That part is accurate reporting: the vote numbers and names match.



✅ Bottom line:


  • The part about who voted on the SAVE Act is true.
  • Claims about 85% of fraud being Democrats, and GOP members profiting from “massive fraud,” are false or unsubstantiated.
 
The SPLC crime is from right-wing sources, bad ones. They say they will defend themselves in court. You Trumpys claim your charges as fact. It is how you operate. You would think that after finding case after case you guys touted were wrong, would make you reluctant to say you know what happened. But here we go again.
 
Back
Top