A massive outside money operation has been exposed in Texas's 32nd Congressional District, and the receipts are damning. Federal Election Commission filings reveal over one million dollars in Super PAC spending flowing through shell companies in Delaware, Virginia, and Ohio — with zero Texas-based vendors anywhere in sight.
Welcome to the new election interference, Patriots. And it's happening right under your nose.
The Money Trail: Follow the Receipts
Strong PAC, backing candidate Jace Yarbrough in the March 3rd Republican primary, filed five separate 24-hour and 48-hour urgent spending reports with the FEC between February 2nd and February 11th. That's five emergency filings in just nine days — the kind the FEC requires when big money starts moving fast near an election.
The total? A jaw-dropping $1,047,888.07 in a congressional primary race.
But here's where it gets interesting. Every single vendor receiving these funds is based outside Texas:
Ballast LLC — registered in Dover, Delaware (the corporate secrecy capital of America) — handled digital ad placement, including a single disbursement of $250,000. Darby House LLC — based in Arlington, Virginia, right in the shadow of the D.C. swamp — produced TV ads, radio spots, and digital content. GRP Buying LLC — operating out of Upper Arlington, Ohio — placed TV and radio buys, including one line item of $451,870 for television placement alone.
Delaware. Virginia. Ohio. Three states. Three vendors. Zero Texans.
The Soros Blueprint Already Worked
This isn't the first time Texas has seen this playbook. State Senate District 9 — a Trump +17 stronghold held by Republicans for decades — didn't just flip recently. It swung 30 points. Millions poured in through layered PAC structures, including $3.25 million from AB PAC (funded by the non-disclosing AB Foundation) and another half million from Geosor Corporation, owned by none other than George Soros.
When a machine proves it can flip one district, it moves to the next. TX-32 is next on the menu.
Big Tech: The Other Half of the Equation
But the money is only part of the equation. Where do those digital ads run? On platforms controlled by Silicon Valley giants — the same platforms caught red-handed manipulating political content.
In May 2024, the Texas Senate Committee on State Affairs heard explosive sworn testimony from Google whistleblower Zach Voorhees, Facebook whistleblower Ryan Hartwig, and researcher Dr. Robert Epstein. The findings were chilling:
"These sound more like actions we'd expect from a Russian propaganda complex." — Zach Voorhees, former Google engineer
Dr. Epstein's research documented Google sending voter registration prompts disproportionately to liberal-profiled users. Voorhies exposed internal blacklists and a censorship AI called "Machine Learning Fairness." The committee voted unanimously — Democrats and Republicans — to authorize subpoenas to Alphabet, Meta, TikTok, and X.
When both parties agree something stinks, pay attention.
Apple News: Zero Conservative Voices
Just days ago, the Media Research Center dropped another bombshell. They examined 620 stories featured in Apple News during January 2026. The results? 440 from left-leaning outlets. 180 from centrist sources. And from conservative publications like Fox News or the New York Post? Zero.
FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson has already sent a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook warning this may violate Section 5 of the FTC Act.
The Bottom Line
When a Super PAC spends a million dollars, they file with the FEC. We can see every penny. But when Big Tech tilts its algorithm and buries half the information landscape? No disclosure. No accountability. Nothing.
Texas wasn't built by committee. It wasn't funded by foundations in Delaware. And it sure as hell wasn't designed to be remote-controlled by coastal elites and globalist money machines.
Patriots, share this with every Texas voter you know. The March 3rd primary is coming fast — and the machine is already running.
