Election integrity watchdog hails landmark SCOTUS decision on AZ elections
"This decision is spot-on and validates all of our claims about the dangers of private election funding, which we've been making since 2018," said Phill Kline, director of The Amistad Project of the Thomas More Society.
- "This decision is spot-on and validates all of our claims about the dangers of private election funding, which we've been making since 2018," said Phill Kline, director of The Amistad Project of the Thomas More Society.
- "The evidence is overwhelming that government officials who received private money played favorites on behalf of one candidate, creating the sort of disparate impact that this ruling condemns."
- The outcome confirms The Amistad Project's legal theories put forth in ongoing litigation concerning the use of private money to perform government functions during the 2020 elections.
- The Amistad Project's investigations have detected at least $1 billion in services and contributions funneled through private organizations to government election offices.