Monday, February 23, 2026

WATCH: Hidden Camera Reveals Muslims Used Voter Fraud To Gain Power In This U.S. State.

In a series of undercover videos, Democrat lawmakers and left-wing activists candidly describe how Muslim activists gamed state election laws—and in many instances violated those laws—ostensibly to the benefit of the Democratic Party. They detail how Muslims in the state have used a combination of voter fraud, ballot harvesting, and intimidation to gain power in several of the state’s cities.

Karen Majewski, who served as the Mayor of Hamtramck from 2006 until 2021, claims that Muslim candidates would fill out the absentee ballots while sitting in the voter’s dining room. “The absentee ballots are being filled out in people’s dining rooms by the candidates,” Majewski says in the undercover video. Under Michigan law, only close family members or an election official can handle a voter’s absentee ballot and deliver it to a drop box.

According to Majewski, both Michigan’s Attorney General Dana Nessel and federal officials are investigating instances of election fraud perpetrated in the state’s Bangladeshi and Yemeni communities. However, she notes that government officials have declined to address the problems in the past.

In another video, Lynn Blasey—a former candidate for Hamtramck’s city council, claims the Mulsim community held a secret meeting before the 2021 election where absentee ballots were auctioned off to the candidates, with the highest bidder subsequently winning their respective elections.

It should be noted that Hamtramck became the first Muslim-majority city in the United States in 2013, with a population primarily drawn from Yemen, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. In 2021, Hamtramck became the first U.S. locality to elect an all-Muslim city council and mayor. However, some progressive activists now feel betrayed after Muslim lawmakers barred LGBTQ displays on city property in June of last year.

WATCH: 

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In a series of undercover videos, Democrat lawmakers and left-wing activists candidly describe how Muslim activists gamed state election laws—and in many instances violated those laws—ostensibly to the benefit of the Democratic Party. They detail how Muslims in the state have used a combination of voter fraud, ballot harvesting, and intimidation to gain power in several of the state's cities. show more

Ousted Bangladeshi Prime Minister Reportedly Flees to London.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina of Bangladesh has resigned after 15 years in power after weeks of violent protests and clashes with security forces. On Monday, demonstrators marched to the capital, Dhaka, defying a military curfew. They stormed Hasina’s official residence and celebrated her ouster in the streets, with some seen looting the residence’s furnishings and electronics.

In a televised address, Army Chief General Waker-Us-Zaman confirmed that Hasina, 76, had departed the country. An interim government will be established. Reports indicated that Hasina, accompanied by her sister, had flown to the eastern Indian state of West Bengal in a military helicopter. There are also reports of her heading to London, England.

Hasina is accused of presiding over arbitrary arrests, torture, extortion, and intimidation. She would not be the first questionable foreign leader to be welcomed by Britain. The country already hosts at least five Rwandan genocide suspects and a Hamas leader who lives in London in a house provided by taxpayers, among others.

In London’s Whitechapel, home to a large Bangladeshi community, the news of her ouster spurred widespread celebration. Community members, who often seem more invested in Bangladesh than Britain, chanted and waved flags.

DEATH AND DISORDER. 

The violence ahead of Hasina’s ouster resulted in nearly 300 deaths and numerous injuries as protesters clashed with security forces. Last Sunday alone, almost 100 people died in the clashes.

Authorities initially shut down the Internet and imposed a curfew on Sunday night, covering Dhaka and other major districts.

The unrest has been attributed to allegations of autocratic governance by Hasina. Many of her political opponents, including the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and the banned Jamaat-e-Islami (Society of Islam) party, were detained or marginalized in the lead-up to her re-election in 2023, an election marred by accusations of being neither free nor fair.

Hasina’s opposition is not without its own controversies, with Jamaat-e-Islami being an Islamic fundamentalist party banned for its role in the genocide of Hindus in East Pakistan, as Bangladesh then was, in 1971.

Image via Wikimedia Commons.

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Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina of Bangladesh has resigned after 15 years in power after weeks of violent protests and clashes with security forces. On Monday, demonstrators marched to the capital, Dhaka, defying a military curfew. They stormed Hasina's official residence and celebrated her ouster in the streets, with some seen looting the residence's furnishings and electronics. show more