Chicago is pretty much synonymous with crime and corruption. So, what happens when you try to fix it from the inside? One 19-year-old conservative found out the hard way.
A DePaul student collected 1,703 signatures to run for alderman in his Chicago ward. But more than 2,700 people supposedly signed affidavits revoking their support.
Something doesn't add up, writes columnist @John_Kass. https://t.co/8gsdCAMk7P
— Chicago Tribune (@chicagotribune) December 8, 2018
Crazy story that really emphasizes the insane level of corruption in Chicago. They got 2,600+ people to commit a crime by signing fraudulent revocations just to try to get this college freshman off the ballot. https://t.co/b5iyEnw8S8
— (((AG))) (@AG_Conservative) December 10, 2018
It's a commonplace that Chicago is spectacularly corrupt & that the Chicago Dem machine combines that corruption with brutal political strength, but you really need to read this *amazing* story to grasp just how that works in practice, on the ground level. https://t.co/blSMzmavYn
— Jeff B. (@EsotericCD) December 10, 2018
We’d excerpt the entire piece here if we could. This will give you a taste — a rotten one:
The David is David Krupa, 19, a freshman at DePaul University who drives a forklift part time. He’s not a political powerhouse. He’s just a conservative Southwest Side teenager studying political science and economics who got it in his head to run for alderman in a race that pits him against the most powerful ward organization in Chicago.
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To get on the ballot, Krupa was required to file 473 valid signatures of ward residents with the Chicago Board of Elections. Krupa filed 1,703 signatures.
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More than 2,700 revocations were turned over to the elections board to cancel the signatures on Krupa’s petitions. Chicago Board of Elections officials had never seen such a massive pile of revocations.
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“We turned in 1,703 signatures. We compared them to the 2,796 revocations, and found only 187 matches, meaning only 187 people who signed David’s petitions filed revocations,” [election attorney Michael] Dorf said. “So, what about the 2,609 people who didn’t sign for David but who filed revocations? That’s fraud. That’s perjury. That’s felony.”
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You seriously need to read the whole thing. If you can stomach it.
I got too mad to keep reading.
— yokotaster (@neontaster) December 10, 2018
Honestly, we totally understand how @neontaster feels. This story is absolutely infuriating. And if this isn’t blatant election fraud, we don’t know what is.
This is outrageous.
— Rachel Gold (@rgolddmd) December 10, 2018
Damn. That’s bad…
— Sean Elkins (@SeanElkins) December 10, 2018
This is so wild and despicable. Wow.
— Joseph Moran (@JosephPMoran) December 10, 2018
The back end is particularly grating – how there will be zero accountability for this – none, zero, zilch, nada. No trials, no arrests, just swept under the rug
— Cheesetrader (@cheesetrader1) December 10, 2018
That is insane. Over 2,500 felonies likely committed that no one will ever investigate or care about.
And for what reason?? So a 19 year old can’t get 3% of the vote?
— SbWisLaw (@SbWisLaw) December 10, 2018
The Chicago political machine got over 2000 people to commit an obvious, provable felony for the purpose of keeping a college kid off the ballot.
And there will not be any consequences for them. https://t.co/ZmMf3qwKFG— PoliMath (@politicalmath) December 10, 2018
Not if history is any indication.
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Editor’s note: This post has been updated with additional text and tweets.
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