Michael Gargiulo, recent candidate for Georgia State Senate and current Chief of Staff for State Senator @realColtonMoore, boasts about being a “Cabinet-level Advisor” to President Trump, with press releases announcing his nomination.
And this appears to be complete fiction.
The claim of this position is not a subtle, minor detail in his bio. His profile on X (@MichaelforGA) literally begins with “Cabinet-level Advisor @realDonaldTrump”.
That’s even before he mentions his *actual* job as Chief of Staff for State Senator Colton Moore.
Attempts to substantiate this claim online turned up only two paid press releases on PRNewswire and Yahoo dated Jan 24, 2025, and a Jan 27 piece from a website that republishes press releases.
Who paid for these press releases? Gargiulo’s own company.
The press releases claim “Michael Gargiulo, CEO of VPN.com and former candidate for State Senate in Georgia, has been selected as a Cabinet-Level Advisor for President Donald J. Trump.”
But notably, no one is quoted other than Gargiulo.
The press releases further claim “Gargiulo met with President Trump in Atlanta, Georgia and prayed with him days before the 2024 election.”
PRNewswire includes a picture of this “meeting” … which appears to be of Gargiulo attending a Trump fundraiser where he paid for a photo.
Yesterday, I had the chance to ask Gargiulo, in person, about his “Cabinet-level Advisor” nomination. He said it was reported online, and I acknowledged his press releases.
He also said he had an email from Trump’s people offering him the role, and asked if I’d like to see it.
Gargiulo searched his phone, and then showed me the email he had received from Trump’s team, offering him the position of “Cabinet-level Advisor” to President Trump.
And it was a spam email from the Trump campaign.
Very much like these, which I also received after the election:
Gargiulo seemed perturbed that I did not accept his ‘proof’, as I tried to point out that it appeared to be campaign spam.
When I showed him a similar email on my phone, he looked at me like I was crazy and asked if *I* had “gone through the process” to “accept” Trump’s offer.
And for someone who seemingly sincerely believes spam email claims of Presidential nominations, Gargiulo is not a fringe nobody. In his State Senate race for Lawrenceville-area District 9, he touted the support of the Lt Governor & a former US Senator, and got 40% of the vote.
I had initially expected Gargiulo’s boasts of being an “Official Cabinet-Level Advisor” to President Trump to be just dishonest resumé fluffing.
I never would’ve predicted that he actually *believed* a Trump campaign email when it said they were offering him a fantasy position.
Georgia’s State Election Board is back in the news, so let’s talk about the July 12 meeting that three members unilaterally called, without the chair, and attempted to vote on proposals.
Because what Janelle King claimed in that meeting doesn’t match what open records reveal. 🧵
To refresh, on July 9, the State Election Board held a meeting that ultimately lasted all day. As 5 pm approached, Chairman John Fervier suggested the board should recess until 9 am the next morning. There was no disagreement expressed at the time.
After one additional rule was heard, a motion was made to recess until 9am Wednesday, it was seconded, and the board voted 4-0 in approval.
Again, there was no dissent, and the Chair even consulted with Rick Jeffares about a rule that Jeffares himself would present the next day.
In late 2023, the Georgia Republican Assembly adopted a *Birther* resolution, claiming Nikki Haley is Constitutionally ineligible to be President.
And in the version adopted by the NFRA, they cited the “precedent-setting U.S. Supreme Court case” of…
Dred Scott v Sandford. 😳🧵
The National Federation of Republican Assemblies adopted its version, by unanimous vote, at the NFRA Convention in October 2023.
The Georgia Republican Assembly adopted its version on December 9, 2023.
Both organizations are currently headed by Brookhaven attorney Alex Johnson.
The NFRA and GRA claim “multiple US Supreme Court cases have found that a ‘Natural Born Citizen’ is defined as a person born on American soil of parents who are both citizens of the United States at the time of the child's birth.”
On March 29, 2022, True the Vote spoke to a Pennsylvania Senate special committee, and presented what they said was a “pattern of life” from a supposed PA ballot trafficker.
And buried in the details of that exhibit may be the dumbest ‘evidence’ that TTV has ever offered.
Approximately 15 minutes into the linked video, Gregg Phillips shows the above “Philadelphia County Methodology” map, and says “The pings you see up there are one person going to a total of 138 drop boxes.”
Phillips claims TTV identified a total of 1155 “target devices” in Philadelphia County. And he says they vetted those: “Probably half of our time was spent really teasing out false positives.”
But they illustrate only the one, single device that they claim visited 138 dropboxes.
VoterGA is a self-styled “election integrity” organization that has advanced various election conspiracy claims, even in litigation.
VoterGA’s founder & leader is Garland Favorito. And it is underappreciated just HOW MANY conspiracy theories he has endorsed. Including 9/11 ones.
This is significant because VoterGA is not just a random online outlet. It spent over $320,000 in 2022. It actively promotes legislation. Garland frequently shows up to speak at legislative and election board hearings.
But the beliefs he’s voiced are on par with Alex Jones.
In 2000, Garland Favorito published a book, “Our Nation Betrayed: From Impeachment to Infinite War.” Two years later, he released a 2nd Edition with an additional 100+ pages.
The back cover hints at some of the conspiracies Garland talks up inside.
True the Vote has long refused to ID its Georgia “whistleblower” who was the inspiration for their ‘2000 Mules’ work. Most recently, they told a court they don’t even know his name.
I believe he was real, TTV knows who he is, and they’ve known he’s not credible *since 2020*.
🧵
TTV’s most prominently invoked their “John Doe” in their complaint to the GA Secretary of State in Nov 2020. It claimed he came to TTV with a story of NGOs running a “ballot trafficking” scheme that he was paid to participate in.
TTV provided no evidence supporting these claims.
Instead, TTV made it very clear that along with providing no evidence supporting John Doe’s story, they would also not share the identity of John Doe or provide any means by which Georgia investigators could interview him or even merely gauge his credibility.
Between 2020 and 2022, True the Vote reported spending a total of $928,193 on “App/Website Development.”
But what apps or websites has TTV actually produced that could justifiably have cost nearly a MILLION DOLLARS total?
Their 2020 return claims they “developed a website to educate the public” and “created an app to analyze voter data,” but identifies neither by name.
The TTV website is fairly basic. OpenInk is a minimally-organized collection of uploaded docs. The IV3 app doesn’t seem to EXIST.
More precisely, an IV3 webpage exists (), but it currently offers no app to download. The IV3 app that once existed was limited to verified individuals in just seven states, and Wired found it to be seriously flawed.