Patriots, you're not going to believe this one. Virginia has an election law so ridiculous it sounds like something out of a banana republic - and now the Republican National Committee is finally doing something about it.
The RNC, joined by Virginia voter Matthew Hurtt and RITE PAC, has filed a bombshell lawsuit in Richmond Circuit Court targeting a state election law that literally allows people who have NEVER lived in Virginia to vote there. Yes, you read that right. Never lived there, but still voting.
How is this even possible? While the exact mechanics of this loophole remain under scrutiny, the very fact that such a provision exists in Virginia's election code should outrage every American who believes in fair elections and basic common sense.
"Republicans will always fight for election integrity in our Commonwealth!" the Virginia GOP declared on social media, sharing news of the lawsuit.
This legal challenge comes at a crucial time as President Trump's second-term agenda includes comprehensive election integrity reforms nationwide. The administration has made it clear that every state must clean up their voter rolls and eliminate the kind of nonsense that allows non-residents to influence local elections.
Of course, Democrats are already crying "voter suppression" - because apparently requiring people to actually LIVE in a state before voting there is somehow controversial in 2026. One liberal activist on social media was already ranting about "unlawful Trump attacks" on voting, proving once again that the left sees any attempt at election security as a threat to their power.
The Bigger Picture
This Virginia lawsuit isn't happening in a vacuum. It's part of a broader conservative movement to restore sanity to American elections after years of COVID-era "emergency" measures that conveniently benefited Democrats. From mail-in ballot harvesting to relaxed signature verification, the 2020 election opened Pandora's box of questionable practices.
Now, with Republicans controlling Washington and momentum building for the SAVE Act and other election integrity measures, states like Virginia are finding their sketchy election laws under the microscope where they belong.
The question every Virginia taxpayer should be asking: How many elections have been influenced by people who don't even live there? And why did it take a lawsuit to address something this obviously wrong?
