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Ken Paxton Strikes a Nerve and ActBlue Responds With Federal Lawsuit

ActBlue just sued Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in federal court, and the desperation is showing. The Democratic fundraising juggernaut claims Paxton is retaliating against them for political reasons, conveniently ignoring that investigating potential fraud and foreign donations is literally what attorneys general are supposed to do. But context matters here, and the timing tells you everything you need to know about who’s really playing politics.

Paxton filed suit against ActBlue last month in Texas state court over allegations the platform misled Congress and the public about its donation practices. That’s a serious charge, not some frivolous attack cooked up in a campaign war room. We’re talking about the integrity of our electoral system and whether foreign money is seeping into American politics through convenient loopholes. ActBlue’s response? They ran straight to federal court in Boston claiming First Amendment violations and political persecution.

Lawrence Oliver, ActBlue’s chief legal officer, wants you to believe this is about protected speech and association rights. He says Paxton has spent two years investigating and harassing his organization. Two years of investigation sounds less like harassment and more like thorough law enforcement when you’re dealing with billions of dollars flowing through a political platform. The left loves to wrap itself in constitutional protections the moment anyone questions how they operate.

Here’s what ActBlue won’t tell you loudly. They claim selective prosecution because Paxton hasn’t gone after WinRed, the Republican fundraising counterpart. That argument might hold water if WinRed faced the same allegations of misleading Congress about foreign donations. It doesn’t. This isn’t about partisan targeting. It’s about following the evidence where it leads, and right now that trail runs through ActBlue’s donation processes.

The lawsuit paints Paxton as some kind of authoritarian figure suppressing Democratic speech and hobbling political opponents. You know what that sounds like? Projection. Democrats have spent years weaponizing federal agencies against conservatives, from the IRS targeting tea party groups to the FBI investigating parents at school board meetings. Now when a Republican attorney general does his job investigating potential violations of law, suddenly it’s retaliation and abuse of power.

Paxton’s running for Senate in Texas, which ActBlue wants you to think explains everything. They’re suggesting he’s manufacturing this case to boost his political profile. But Paxton didn’t create the allegations against ActBlue out of thin air. President Trump directed the attorney general to investigate the platform over suspicions of foreign donations. That’s not political theater. That’s responding to legitimate national security concerns about foreign interference in our elections.

The timing argument cuts both ways too. ActBlue filed this federal lawsuit right as Paxton’s state case was moving forward. Who’s really playing political games here? A sitting attorney general pursuing fraud allegations or a Democratic fundraising machine trying to forum shop its way out of accountability by running to a friendlier federal court in Massachusetts?

ActBlue processes billions in small dollar donations for Democratic candidates and causes. That kind of money moving through digital platforms creates opportunities for abuse whether anyone wants to admit it or not. Requiring proper verification and transparency isn’t suppressing speech. It’s ensuring our elections remain clean and free from foreign manipulation. Those used to be bipartisan values before everything became a weapon in the culture war.

The First Amendment doesn’t protect fraud. It doesn’t shield deceptive practices from investigation. And it certainly doesn’t give political organizations immunity from state attorneys general enforcing the law. ActBlue can dress this up in constitutional language all they want, but what they’re really arguing is that Democratic fundraising should operate above scrutiny while Republican officials should look the other way.

Paxton said it plainly on social media. He sued ActBlue for deceiving Americans through donation processes that allow fraudulent and foreign donations. He’ll hold lawbreakers accountable. That’s not retaliation. That’s the job description. The fact that ActBlue is fighting this hard suggests Paxton might be onto something they’d prefer stayed buried.

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