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It's what today's GOP calls the ground game.
To quote prioress Sister Stephanie Schmidt: “A free republic depends on free and fair elections,” she said. “It depends equally on a discerning and conscientious citizenry who do not unquestioningly accept the word of anyone who has a social media platform.”
The Benedictine Sisters of Erie, Pa., issued an Oct. 23 statement noting they are “pursuing legal counsel” regarding “public defamation” after self-described “door-knocking guru” Cliff Maloney alleged on X (formerly Twitter) that while “53 voters are registered” at the Mount St. Benedict Monastery, “turns out … NO ONE lives there.
“We knocked on the door because a Republican mail-in ballot is unreturned,” wrote Maloney, founder of The Pennsylvania Chase, a door-to-door campaign funded by the Citizens Alliance of Pennsylvania political action committee, in his Oct. 23 post. “Our attorney’s are reviewing this right now. We will not let the Dems count on illegal votes.”
Maloney included an image of an apparent text message, which he called a “receipt from Jeremy (one of our leaders in Erie),” that indicated the canvasser had spoken with “the lady working” at the monastery, who advised him that no one lived at the monastery, but (according to the canvasser) “from time to time” residents pass through and may “stay a night or two.”
Investigative journalist Jacqueline Sweet quickly disputed the claim, saying on X that she had confirmed with the sisters that they live full-time at the monastery.
It's what today's GOP calls the ground game.
To quote prioress Sister Stephanie Schmidt: “A free republic depends on free and fair elections,” she said. “It depends equally on a discerning and conscientious citizenry who do not unquestioningly accept the word of anyone who has a social media platform.”