Washington, D.C. – As we approach the final week until election day, Republicans are leaving no stone unturned to help Donald Trump take back the White House and implement their dangerous Project 2025 plan. Since entering the race, Jill Stein has boosted Trump, downplayed his racist and violent rhetoric, and made it clear she is only interested in damaging Vice President Harris’s chances of winning the White House. Even her own family has asked her to leave the race, but Stein refuses to back out because she’s a Republican in green clothing, and that’s why she continues to accept help from Trump’s allies, donors, and attorneys.
A damning piece from the Washington Post shows that a Republican Super PAC, Badger Values PAC, is spending big money to boost Jill Stein in key battleground state Wisconsin. Badger Values PAC, founded by a longtime Republican operative with ties to Senate GOP leadership, reported spending $982,905 on ads in October, including at least $307,000 on ads or direct mailers that mention Stein.
Meanwhile, climate groups like Friends of the Earth, the Sunrise Movement, League Of Conservation Voters, Sierra Club, and climate conscious voters are blasting Stein for her hypocritical anti-environmental record, highlighting that Stein personally profits from Big Oil companies like ExxonMobil and Chevron.
More happenings from third-party candidates this week:
Detroit Metro Times: Butch Hollowell: Third-party candidates could hand Michigan — and the country — back to Trump
MSNBC Lawrence: ‘A vote for Jill Stein is a vote for Donald Trump' and mass deportation
ABC Could little-known presidential contender Jill Stein hand the election to Donald Trump?
Cleveland.com Federal judge delays ruling on Jill Stein's Ohio ballot disqualification as Election Day nears
Fox News: RFK Jr urges Catholics to vote for Trump in new ad
WKAR Minor party nominees could have big impact on Mich. presidential race
CNN RFK Jr. asks US Supreme Court to take his name off Wisconsin's presidential ballot
The Hill How third-party candidates could make a difference in swing states