In a stunning admission that has Democrats scrambling for damage control, Maine's Democrat Attorney General Aaron Frey filed a brief with the state's Supreme Court essentially confessing that his own party's beloved ranked-choice voting expansion violates the Maine Constitution.
The legal brief, filed in what Frey diplomatically calls "statutory wordsmithing," argues that the expansion of ranked-choice voting beyond its current limited scope simply doesn't align with the state's foundational governing document. Translation: Democrats got so excited about rigging the voting system in their favor, they forgot to check if it was actually legal.
This bombshell admission comes at a time when election integrity has never been more important to American patriots. While President Trump's administration works tirelessly to secure our elections and ensure only legal votes count, Democrat states like Maine have been experimenting with convoluted voting schemes that confuse voters and muddy electoral outcomes.
The Constitutional Reality Check
Ranked-choice voting, the Democrats' latest attempt to manipulate electoral outcomes, allows voters to rank candidates in order of preference rather than selecting just one. Proponents claim it creates "fairer" elections, but critics rightfully point out that it's just another way to engineer results when Democrats can't win straight-up competitions.
Now even Maine's top Democrat legal official can't pretend the scheme passes constitutional scrutiny. Frey's brief to the Maine Supreme Court essentially admits that expanding this system beyond its current narrow application would require actual constitutional changes – not just legislative sleight of hand.
"The expansion does not align with the state's constitution," Frey's brief acknowledges, delivering a devastating blow to progressive voting activists.
This constitutional reality check couldn't come at a better time. As the Trump-Vance administration continues dismantling the failed policies of the previous regime, Americans are demanding transparency and constitutional compliance in every aspect of government – especially our sacred voting processes.
The question now is whether Maine Democrats will respect their own attorney general's constitutional analysis, or whether they'll try to ram through their voting scheme anyway. Given their track record, patriots shouldn't hold their breath waiting for Democrats to suddenly start following the law.
