5 Short Election Things You Should Know, but the Media is Silent or Distorting the Truth

Huey ReportUncategorized

Here are 5 election things you may not have noticed, but these short items are important:

1. James Talarico: Evangelical Who “Hates Christianity”

Texas Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico is a leftist radical who says he is a Christian moderate.

In a podcast interview from 2021 he told the “non-binary transgender”-identifying host, Roberto Che Espinoza, “I always think of myself as a Christian who hates Christianity.” Talarico also claims that the teachings of Jesus are similar to “the teachings of Buddha and other mystical traditions.”

2.DSA Primary Wins Over 30

The radical DSA candidates have won over 30 primaries in the 2026 election. Here is an example:

Democrat Representative Diana DeGette lost her primary election in Colorado to radical socialist Melat Kiros. The 68-year-old DeGette has occupied the seat since 1997.

Kiros is an Ethiopian immigrant who is backed  by Bernie Sanders.

She has antisemitic views, such as questioning the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish state, which got her fired from a New York law firm back in 2023.

3.Tucker Quits Republican Party

Tucker Carlson has announced that he is leaving the Republican Party.

Tucker has increasingly become anti-Israel, anti-Trump, and a fusion of liberal and conservative ideas.

His intent seems to provide an alternative party.

4.California Governor: New Voter Propaganda Bureaucracy Created

Governor Gavin Newsom is showing his desperate attempt to keep California’s corrupt voting system in place and fight those who object. He just initiated (in a bankrupt state) $40 million aimed at speeding up California’s vote count.

$10 million will pay for “voter education” and $750,000 will be used to “combat” election “misinformation.” Interpretation: to fight anyone revealing possible voter fraud.

5.Tennessee Voter Guide

The Tennessee Voter Guide for the August 6, 2026 election will be posted by Monday, July 20th. Click HERE to see who to vote for.