Dara Lindenbaum represented a nonprofit in a lawsuit that made voter
suppression claims; the lawsuit was later amended
President Biden's recent nominee to serve on the Federal Election
Commission represented a Stacey Abrams-backed nonprofit in a lawsuit
that made several unproven allegations of voter suppression. Nominee
Dara Lindenbaum also signed on to court papers alleging voting
machines "switched" votes during the 2018 Georgia gubernatorial
race.
The Senate Rules and Administration Committee held a confirmation
hearing for Lindenbaum, a lawyer with the Washington firm of
Sandler, Reiff, Lamb, Rosenstein & Birkenstock, to be a commissioner
on the FEC. Days later, the Georgia trial for Fair Fight Action and
Care in Action v. Raffensperger began in U.S. District Court in
Atlanta.
Lindenbaum's name appears as the third signature on the original
complaint in the lawsuit alleging voter suppression in the race that
saw then-Republican Secretary of State Brian Kemp defeat Abrams by
55,000 votes statewide in the governor's race.
LATINOS BREAK WITH DEMOCRATS AS REPUBLICANS LOOK FOR MIDTERM
MAJORITY WIN
"One troubling problem — encountered by several voters — is that
voting machines switched their votes from Leader Stacey Abrams to
Secretary Kemp," the 66-page complaint filed Nov. 27, 2018, in U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of Georgia alleges.
The voting machines were picked and run by Democrats.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-fec-pick-claimed-georgia-
voting-machines-switched-votes-abrams-kemp-2018