We received a lot of questions yesterday about our post concerning Dominion Voting Systems and we’d like to clarify. To begin with, it is true that Trump and his allies made many false accusations against Dominion in the past, accusations claiming that Dominion manipulated or rigged votes in the 2020 election. Dominion responded with lawsuits against several of those making the claims, defending itself against those allegations. 
What we are talking about now is the company under new ownership. In October 2025, Dominion was purchased by Scott Leiendecker, a former Republican election official, and his company, Liberty Vote, assumed full ownership and control. The new owner describes the move as a “bold and historic” effort to transform election integrity in the United States. 
Because of this shift in ownership and alignment, there’s a parallel worth noting with the recent developments in the Georgia election‐interference case: The head of the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, Peter J. Skandalakis, announced today that he will replace Fani Willis (the DA in Fulton County, Georgia) who was removed from overseeing her election interference case against Trump and co-defendants because of a conflict of interest. 
If a leading prosecutor is disqualified for an apparent conflict of interest, and a new one is appointed to ensure the integrity of the process, then we’re seeing something similar in the Dominion situation: the company is now MAGA-aligned under its new ownership, and that shift warrants being treated as a conflict of interest as well.
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