More Maine House “Red Flag” Targets Named by PowerVote

James A. Todaro, former CPA
2 min readJun 14, 2019

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More Maine House Representatives have been targeted for public whipping on the the upcoming vote on the “Red Flag” bill currently being considered. Here is the expanded list:

PowerVote Vulnerability Ranking-Maine House 2020

“Whipping” is a common term used to describe the phenomenon of driving lawmakers in a certain direction the way a cowboy uses a whip to drive cattle. Whips controlled by Democrats or Republicans usually go by the name of “Majority Whip” or “Minority Whip.” Until PowerVote, public political whips have been effectively banned by campaign finance laws that limit the size of contributions from political groups. Maine’s limit is $400. To free its subscribers from the law, PowerVote has created a new crypto currency money, similar to Bitcoin, so that PowerVote subscribers can use it to influence and control lawmakers.

About PowerVote

Although the PowerVote deposits shown at www.powervote.io themselves are politically harmless, it’s what happens after they’re refunded that lawmakers need to worry about. A publication called the The PowerVote Refund Alert System will accompany these refunds. The Alert gives depositors news of what happened to their political demands as well as advice on what they can do about it. If a targeted lawmaker refuses to be “whipped,” the advice could include making a campaign contribution to the lawmaker’s opponent during an election. With PowerVote money in hand, subscribers will have all the information that they need to send their PowerVotes to this opponent. Since they’ve been willing to do without this money up until this time in hopes of getting the political action that they want, it’s reasonable to think they will spend at least some of it to help remove “a cow that refuses to be herded” from office.

Under Maine campaign finance laws and those of most states, a Political Action Committee (PAC) is prohibited from contributing enough money to a candidate’s campaign for a group to defeat an incumbent. Under the PowerVote contribution scenario, the contributions should be charged against the individual who made them and not the group, which means the ability of the group to influence and control lawmakers has no legal limit.

Powervote accepts deposits of PowerVote coins in support of any political demand and displays the totals as votes on its web page at www.powervote.io. PowerVote does not accept any other currency for deposit.

Contact Information:

James A. Todaro, email jim@powervote.io,

Twitter https://twitter.com/JamesATodaro, web www.powervote.io

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James A. Todaro, former CPA

Founder of PowerVote, Freedom from U.S. Tyranny in Just Five Minutes