United Sovereign Americans
2022 Election Validity Scorecards
What is a Scorecard?
The analysis of each state’s official records from the 2022 General Election comprises the Election Validity Scorecard, highlighting categories of potential fraud. Each Scorecard addresses the legality of voter registrations, vote counts, and discrepancies in reported election results with four simple questions, which expose systemic violations across multiple states.
1. Were the voter rolls accurate as required by the National Voter Registration Act of 1993? Each registration is required by law to include certain information that verifies a registrant’s eligibility. In 21 states, there were 29 million registrations with material omissions and errors.
2. Were votes counted from eligible voters, as required by the U.S. Constitution? In those 21 states more than 10 million ballots counted were attributed to voters registered with material omissions and errors.
3. Was the number of votes counted equal to the number of voters who voted? There was not one state where the official number of ballots counted was equal to the number of recorded voters in the database. In some cases, over one hundred thousand more ballots were counted than the number of voters who voted.
4. Was the number of ballots in error valid according to the Help America Vote Act of 2002? Nearly every state exceeded the HAVA allowable error rate of 1 in 125,000 ballots by tens or hundreds of thousands—California alone by more than 2.8 million errors.
Unite4Freedom is the first organization in the country to conduct these types of forensic audits using each state’s own official data. The result is undeniable: Congress is being elected through a process that is unmonitored, uncontrolled, and producing false returns.
This work represents thousands of hours, and equates to millions of dollars in programming, analysis, and legal research, and has been done exclusively by highly credentialed volunteers, but there are additional expenses that are required to support this research. In some states, access to the state data costs thousands of dollars.
Please show your support!

