Secure the Vote MD has teamed up with United Sovereign Americans to mobilize 100,000 donors, each contributing $50 or more, to support our joint initiative. This fundraising effort is crucial for financing federal lawsuits aimed at safeguarding our elections.
The funds raised through this effort are earmarked specifically for federal election lawsuits. Multiple lawsuits are already in the courts through United Sovereign Americans and locally with the Maryland Election Integrity LLC. Read more about these lawsuits here:
United Sovereign Americans lawsuits: https://unite4freedom.com/progress/
Maryland Election Integrity LLC: /2024/04/19/complaint-for-declaratory-and-injunctive-relief-2/
Join the initiative by donating here: https://unite4freedom.com/100k-challenge/
More About Secure the Vote MD
Includes citizen volunteers working locally with Maryland Election Integrity LLC and nationally with United Sovereign Americans to ensure valid, accurate, and trustworthy voter rolls, which leads to accurate elections. Team members vary from data experts to at-home moms and retired citizens.
Our national association with United Sovereign Americans standardizes the process to ensure legally-valid elections using a comprehensive and easy to understand framework that shows the American voting system is broken. Through an education and litigation strategy the national goal is to fix the election system for all Americans.
About Untied Sovereign Americans, Inc.
United Sovereign Americans, Inc. is a nonprofit corporation incorporated in the state of Missouri. United Sovereign Americans was founded by Marly Hornik, the Executive Director of New York Citizens Audit, and Harry Haury, a cyber-intelligence expert experienced in elections.
Their all-volunteer organization has been building teams of programmers, analysts, legal scholars and more to measure error rates of the 2022 general elections in states throughout the country. Voting systems have a legal accuracy requirement of 0.0008% maximum error. United Sovereign Americans is uncovering system error rates as high as 38%, at the time of certification.