ICYMI: Zdan slams Menendez, vote by mail corruption
The Senate candidate held nothing back when tackling corrupt deviants
ROBBINSVILLE - US Senate candidate Alex Zdan appeared on Watters World last night to discuss the ballot harvesting scandal orchestrated by former Atlantic City Councilman Craig Callaway.
Callaway has already served time for bribery and a sex blackmail case. Democrat’s sought-after political organizer and operative, known for his ability to deliver large blocks of absentee ballots to election officials that often sway the outcome of elections, was arrested on Thursday, February 1st. He has been charged with election fraud involving the misuse of absentee ballots — something his political enemies have long accused him of.
“Callaway is one of the most charismatic, corrupt criminals I’ve ever met,” said Zdan who followed Callaway’s misdeeds for years. “he uses charimas and charm to literally charm the vote out of your hands, and then he sends his army of bums and wine-o’s, who he pays thirty or forty bucks to collect that ballot under New Jerseys messenger law.”
After emphasizing the safety of vote-by mail, Zdan noted that folks like Callaway and his “delivery system” were the problem. In a statement to CJN, Zdan noted that calling out corruption “is the duty of anyone seeking office and has been [his] vocation for the last decade-plus.”
”Like I said on Jesse Watters last night: let’s send an investigative journalist to the Senate and we’ll crack down on corruption like we’ve never seen before.”
WATCH:
"The charges appear to stem from work Callaway did for Rep. Jeff Van Drew’s 2022 reelection campaign... There’s no indication Van Drew (R-02) knew about the alleged scheme....
Van Drew’s 2022 campaign paid GOYV LLC, Callaway’s consulting firm, $65,500 for strategic consulting, including $25,000 in early October, when prosecutors allege the scheme began." (NJ Monitor)
How about reporting about the current legislation barreling through our legislative process right now that actually strengthens the Mt. Laurel mandate. Despite input from the League of Woman Voters, the Sierra Club and other groups, it passed the assembly yesterday. No common sense proposals on this issue have seen the light of day. How about the people that talk about filing for the gubernatorial election next year. Where do they stand?