Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Musk has done this before - remember his $1 million “lottery” in PA to get registered voters to sign a petition, and a similar $47 giveaway to voters in swing states for signing a petition?
This is just naked, shameless bribery.
How was any of that, and now this, permitted from a legal point of view.
Anonymous wrote:Musk has done this before - remember his $1 million “lottery” in PA to get registered voters to sign a petition, and a similar $47 giveaway to voters in swing states for signing a petition?
This is just naked, shameless bribery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn't this like buying someone a beer on voting day from the 1800s? Regardless, sounds like the other side should now just do the same thing until maybe they both agree that yeah, this is not a great idea.
It was ok when he wasn’t a government employee but now that he’s the number one person working at the White House it’s wrong. hopefully they will find a violation that fits. The other side couldn’t do this because they haven’t made up a job and put in someone who didn’t even grow up in America whose it is to cut benefits and jobs from Americans.
Anonymous wrote:Isn't this like buying someone a beer on voting day from the 1800s? Regardless, sounds like the other side should now just do the same thing until maybe they both agree that yeah, this is not a great idea.
By offering cash to voters who sign a petition opposing “activist judges,” Elon Musk’s super PAC can help identify conservative voters in a race for the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Elon Musk is bringing back his most controversial gambit from the 2024 presidential election: paying voters as part of a plan to identify and turn out conservative-leaning ones.
The super PAC that Mr. Musk founded to funnel his fortune into Republican causes, America PAC, said on Thursday that it was offering $100 to registered voters in Wisconsin who sign a petition “in opposition to activist judges” or refer others to sign it. Mr. Musk has been using the group to spend millions of dollars to elect a conservative candidate for the Wisconsin Supreme Court in an April 1 election.