Georgia Lieutenant Governor Burt Jones is finally saying what every patriotic American has been thinking: Fulton County's election integrity problems didn't magically appear in 2020 - they've been a corrupt mess for decades.
Speaking exclusively on "The Alex Marlow Show" Monday, Jones dropped truth bombs about Georgia's most problematic county that the mainstream media has desperately tried to ignore.
"Fulton County has always had issues and they've always been corrupt in Fulton County way before 2020 and they've always had problems," Jones stated, confirming what election integrity advocates have been screaming from the rooftops for years.
The Truth About Fulton County's Dark History
This bombshell admission from Georgia's Lieutenant Governor validates everything President Trump and his supporters have been saying about questionable election practices in the Peach State. While the fake news media painted concerns about Fulton County as "conspiracy theories," Jones is now admitting these problems have deep roots.
"Fulton County has always had issues and they've always been corrupt... way before 2020."
For too long, Republicans have been gaslit into believing that questioning Fulton County's election administration was somehow "undermining democracy." But Jones's honest assessment proves that demanding transparency and accountability isn't extremism - it's patriotism.
This revelation comes at a crucial time as President Trump's second administration works tirelessly to restore election integrity nationwide. The Trump-Vance team has made it clear that every legal vote must count and election fraud will not be tolerated.
What This Means for Future Elections
With brave Republicans like Lieutenant Governor Jones finally speaking truth to power, Americans can have hope that the swamp creatures who've been manipulating our electoral system will face justice. The deep state's election protection racket is crumbling as more officials find the courage to tell the truth.
Patriots across America should take note: when government officials start admitting what we've known all along, real change is coming. The question now is whether Fulton County will finally clean up its act or continue to be a stain on Georgia's electoral integrity.
