Tagg Romney & Fund Raiser Zwick Buy Hart Voting Machines For Swing States
AllvoicesDotCom | 31.10.2012 19:24 | Afghanistan | Repression | Social Struggles | Birmingham | World
Romney son Tagg, Romney chief fund raiser Zwick. These machines were purchased for swing state use.
Tagg Romney, son of Republican presidential candidate
These H.I.G. Hart voting machines were manipulated by Republican operatives in Cincinnati (Was Senator Rob Portman involved? stole 300,000 votes in Ohio from Kerry, giving a fraudulent White House pass to G W Bush in 2004
It's time for the Obama administration
1/ to issue an executive order banning Romney owned voting machines
2. to seek an immediate injunction against candidate or political
party connected voting machines...
3. to bring back the paper ballot
4. to have federal observers monitoring the elections to prevent electronic voting machine fraud
Other Republican owned voting machine companies: Dominion (owned by a Canadian conservative company which gave Republican Gov Walker of Wisconsin a thieving victory in Wisconsin).... Diebold was the original owner of these machines
ESS of Nebraska Election Systems and Software has some of the Ohio machines... when Chuck Hagel was CEO of ESS he counted his own votes and installed himself as a senator from Nebraska
*****************************************************************************************
Romney's Son Tagg Buys H.I.G. Voting Machines And Others To Be Used In Swing States
http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/13221476-romney-family-buys-voting-machines-through-bain-capital-investment
Tagg Romney, the son of Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, has purchased electronic voting machines that will be used in the 2012 elections in Ohio, Texas, Oklahoma, Washington and Colorado.
"Late last month, Gerry Bello and Bob Fitrakis at FreePress.org broke the story of the Mitt Romney/Bain Capital investment team involved in H.I.G. Capital which, in July of 2011, completed a "strategic investment" to take over a fair share of the Austin-based e-voting machine company Hart Intercivic," according to independent journalist Brad Friedman.
But Friedman is not the only one to discover the connection between the Romney family, Bain Capital, and ownership of voting machines.
Truth out reports:
"Through a closely held equity fund called Solamere, Mitt Romney and his wife, son and brother are major investors in an investment firm called H.I.G. Capital. H.I.G. in turn holds a majority share and three out of five board members in Hart Intercivic, a company that owns the notoriously faulty electronic voting machines that will count the ballots in swing state Ohio November 7. Hart machines will also be used elsewhere in the United States.
In other words, a candidate for the presidency of the United States, and his brother, wife and son, have a straight-line financial interest in the voting machines that could decide this fall's election. These machines cannot be monitored by the public. But they will help decide who "owns" the White House."
Both The Nation and New York Times confirm the connection between the Romney family, Solamere and the Bain Capital investment in the voting machine company, Hart Intercivic, whose board of directors serve H.I.G. Capital.
"Mitt Romney, his wife Ann Romney, and their son Tagg Romney are also invested in H.I.G. Capital, as is Mitt's brother G. Scott Romney.
The investment comes in part through the privately held family equity firm called Solamere, which bears the name of the posh Utah ski community where the Romney family retreats to slide down the slopes." Truth out added.
There are also political connections between Solamere and the Romney's. "Matt Blunt, the former Missouri governor who backed Mr. Romney in 2008, is a senior adviser to Solamere, as is Mitt Romney’s brother, Scott, a lawyer," according to the New York Times.
Voter ID and voter fraud have been top issues in the 2012 race, as have claims of Republican voter suppression. Mr. Romney's campaign has also been the subject of controversy over misleading ads, false claims, sketchy math on his tax plan, and overall vagueness on women's rights and other hot button issues.
Raising further questions of legitimacy in the Romney campaign is an audio recording recently made public, where Mitt Romney is heard asking independent business owners to apply pressure to their employees to influence their votes. What has also been made public are the emails those employers have sent to their employees with an implied threat that if they don't vote for Romney they may lose their jobs.
What it all says is that Mitt Romney, with the help of his family and Bain Capital connections, is more than willing to try to take the White House through illegitimate and highly unethical, if not specifically illegal means.
With each passing day, the character and campaign methods of Mitt Romney cast an ever-darker shadow over free and fair American elections.
Yet there is an irony in the Romney campaign that cannot be ignored. For all the noise the right-wing has made in questioning the legitimacy of Obama's presidency, there have been so many questionable efforts made to help put Romney in the White House, if he wins, there should be great dispute over whether his election could ever be called genuinely illegitimate.
The nagging question is why, if Mr. Romney truly has the qualities that American voters want in their president, does he have to go to such great and questionable lengths to try to win the election.
If you like writing about US politics and Campaign 2012, enter "The American Pundit" competition. Allvoices is awarding four $250 prizes each month between now and November. These monthly winners earn eligibility for the $5,000 grand prize, to be awarded after the November election.
***
From other sources:
• After his father's 2008 presidential campaign ended, Mitt Romney's son, Tagg Romney, started Solamere Capital, a private equity fund, along with Spencer Zwick, the Romney campaign's top fund raiser, and a third partner, Eric Scheuermann. Tagg Romney's parents, Mitt and Ann Romney, contributed $10 million to the firm's first fund.
• According to the New York Times, "unlike many private equity funds that specialize in scouting out companies to invest in directly, Solamere is a 'fund of funds' that invests in 22 other private equity funds," and one of the equity firms with which Solamere Capital has partnered is H.I.G. Capital.
• In 2011, H.I.G. Capital made a controlling investment in Hart InterCivic, a national provider of "election voting systems, election management products and services" used in hundreds of voting jurisdictions in several states, including a high-population county in the key swing state of Ohio.
• Therefore, Tagg Romney allegedly holds a significant ownership interest in the manufacturer of voting machines that will be used in an election determining whether his father will become President of the United States.
Davidson, Amy. "Tagg Romney and His Father's Money."
The New Yorker. 1 May 2012.
Eaton, Sabrina. "Elections Boards Deny That Mitt Romney Backers Could Tamper with Results."
The Cleveland Plain-Dealer. 24 October 2012.
Fang, Lee. "Tagg Team: The Romney Family Recipe for Crony Capitalism."
The Nation. 29 October 2012.
Froomkin, Dan. "Pro-Romney Firm's Purchase of Voting Machine Company Raises Alarms."
The Huffington Post. 23 October 2012.
Luo, Michael and Julie Creswell. "Ties to Romney '08 Helped Fuel an Equity Firm."
The New York Times. 30 April 2012.
**************
God's angels stop the criminal Romney syndicate now. http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/...
http://blackboxvoting.org
AllvoicesDotCom
Homepage:
http://freepress.org