Conservative Commentator Sounds Alarm on Major City’s Jaw-Dropping Voter Tactic: Report

Fulton County, Georgia’s most populous jurisdiction, is under renewed attention after conservative commentator David Khait reported clusters of voter registrations at a few downtown addresses and suggested that a George Soros-backed organization may have played a role.

Khait said his review of publicly available voter rolls revealed clusters of voters at locations he considered unusual, raising questions about registration practices.

Khait identified multiple downtown Atlanta addresses with substantial numbers of registered voters linked to single locations. 

According to his reporting, one site at 01 Washington Street Southwest included more than 1,000 registered voters, while a nearby address at 48 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive Southwest, a Catholic church, was linked to over 2,000 voters. 

The commentator said he was surprised by the concentration of registrations at these sites. He suggested that some organizations may have registered individuals experiencing homelessness using these locations. 

Khait claimed that a Soros-funded group had facilitated the registrations, stating that millions had been invested in outreach efforts to sign up homeless voters in the area. 

Georgia election guidance permits people without permanent residences, including those who are homeless, to use an address where they routinely stay—such as a shelter, church or other facility—when registering to vote. 

Those without a fixed location may also designate the county registrar’s office as their official mailing address, according to the Fulton County Elections Office.

Khait’s findings have drawn attention in conservative media circles but have not been independently verified by state election officials. 

Fulton County authorities have not launched a targeted investigation into the specific addresses cited by Khait, LifeZette notes.

The renewed focus on the county also comes amid procedural scrutiny stemming from the 2020 presidential election. 

In late 2025, officials reported to the Georgia State Election Board that several tabulator tapes—printed records from ballot-counting machines—lacked signatures from poll managers, a state-required step to verify totals. 

Under Georgia law, poll managers and witnesses must sign tabulation tapes at the start and end of each voting day to confirm that machine totals align with ballots cast. 

Officials noted that roughly 130 tabulation tapes, covering more than 300,000 early votes, were missing these signatures, according to WTOC.

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Fulton County officials described the missing signatures as procedural errors and said enhanced training had been implemented to prevent recurrence. 

Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger emphasized that the omissions did not affect overall vote counts, citing audits and recounts that confirmed statewide results. 

Adding to scrutiny, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a federal lawsuit seeking access to ballots, ballot stubs, signature envelopes, and related election records from Fulton County’s 2020 general election. 

The complaint alleges that county officials failed to comply with subpoenas issued by the Georgia State Election Board, prompting federal action to ensure proper preservation and review of election materials. 

Advocates for election transparency argue that missing tabulator signatures and limited access to election documents underscore the importance of oversight and verification. 

State election authorities maintain that procedural lapses, while concerning, do not indicate fraud and note that Georgia’s multi-layered audit and voter ID systems safeguard election integrity. 

Khait said he intends to continue reviewing voter rolls associated with nontraditional addresses and has called on state authorities to examine registration practices more closely. 

Fulton County officials have not issued a public response to his statements. 

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By Reece Walker

Reece Walker covers news and politics with a focus on exposing public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, bureaucrats, Big Tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies.

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