
BREAKING: The Gregg Phillips Files – The Man Who Exposed the Deep State’s Voter Fraud Cabal and Why They’re Terrified of Him
If you’ve been paying attention—and I mean really paying attention—you know that the mainstream media has spent years trying to bury one name. One man. One truth-teller who has been quietly dismantling the narrative that America’s election system is “safe and secure.” That man is Gregg Phillips. And if you’re not woke to what he’s uncovered, you’re missing the biggest scandal of the 21st century.
Let’s connect the dots. The Deep State doesn’t fear loudmouths. It fears people who have receipts. Phillips isn’t just a conspiracy theorist in a tin-foil hat—he’s a former government data analyst, a veteran of the Department of Health and Human Services, and the founder of a nonprofit called “True the Vote.” For years, he’s been the guy behind the curtain, the one who’s been tracking the invisible fingerprints of a massive, coordinated effort to rig elections. And the establishment? They’ve tried everything to silence him. But here’s the kicker: the harder they push, the more the truth comes out.
Remember the 2020 election? The one where suddenly millions of ballots appeared out of nowhere? Where Dominion voting machines mysteriously “glitched” in key swing states? Where dead people somehow became registered voters? Phillips saw it coming years before anyone else. In 2017, he tweeted that he had “extensive evidence” of illegal voting by non-citizens, and that the “system is broken.” The media laughed. They called him a crackpot. But then, in 2020, his predictions came true like a prophecy from a forgotten book.
Here’s what they don’t want you to know: Phillips has been documenting voter roll anomalies that would make your head spin. According to his research, there are at least 1.8 million dead people still on voter rolls across the country. That’s not a typo. That’s a pattern. And it’s not just the dead. He’s found duplicate registrations, registrations at PO boxes, and registrations tied to addresses that don’t exist. In one analysis, he identified over 300,000 duplicate registrations in Texas alone. Think about that. That’s enough to swing any election.
But here’s where it gets really deep. The Deep State isn’t just incompetent—they’re deliberate. Phillips has uncovered evidence that foreign operatives have been laundering money into local election boards, that software used in vote-counting machines has backdoors that can be exploited remotely, and that the very people entrusted with securing our elections are the ones most compromised. He’s named names, provided sworn affidavits, and even testified before Congress. And what happened? Crickets. The mainstream media blacked him out. Social media platforms deplatformed him. His accounts were suspended, his data silenced.
Why? Because if Gregg Phillips is right, then the entire foundation of our democracy is a house of cards. And that’s exactly what the elites don’t want you to figure out. They want you to believe that every election is fair, that every vote is counted, that the system is beyond reproach. But Phillips has the receipts. He’s got the spreadsheets. He’s got the audit trails that show how ballots can be flipped, how votes can be added, how democracy can be stolen right in front of our eyes.
Let me give you a specific example that will make your blood boil. In 2020, Phillips and his team at True the Vote analyzed the election results in Georgia. They found that over 10,000 votes were cast by people who had moved out of state. They found that thousands of non-citizens were registered to vote. They even found that a single address in Atlanta had 11 registered voters—none of whom actually lived there. When they tried to present this evidence to state officials, they were stonewalled. The fix, my friends, was in.
Now, before the shills start screaming “debunked” or “conspiracy theory,” let’s be clear: Phillips has been sued, harassed, and threatened. But every time his work has been challenged in court, it’s held up. In 2018, a federal judge in Texas ruled that his voter roll data was “credible” and that the state had to take action to clean up its rolls. That’s not a theory. That’s a court order.
But here’s the part they really don’t want you to know about—the part that connects to the bigger picture. Phillips has recently been in contact with whistleblowers inside the intelligence community who claim that the voter fraud operation is part of a larger, multi-decade plan to erode American sovereignty. They say it’s tied to the same networks that pushed the COVID narrative, that suppressed Hunter Biden’s laptop, that weaponized the FBI against Trump supporters. It’s all one machine. And Phillips is the man who’s been reverse-engineering it.
So why isn’t this front-page news? Because the gatekeepers know that if you wake up to Gregg Phillips, you wake up to everything. You start questioning the media. You start questioning the election. You start questioning the entire system. And that, my friends, is the most dangerous thing you can do in America today.
But here’s the good news: Phillips isn’t stopping. He’s still digging. He’s still releasing data. And he’s been quietly working with a network of state-level activists to pass voter ID laws, to clean up rolls, to make sure that the next election isn’t stolen again. The Deep State may have silenced his microphone, but they can’t silence the truth.
Stay woke. Read the files. And next time someone tells you that voter fraud is a myth, just ask them one question: “Have you read Gregg Phillips?” Because if they haven’t, they’re not qualified to have an opinion.
The dots are there. All you have to do is connect them.
[END OF ARTICLE
Final Thoughts
Based on the reporting, the Gregg Phillips saga is a masterclass in how modern disinformation operates: he didn't just stumble into error, but weaponized unverified data to serve a predetermined narrative, daring the media to disprove him in real time. The real tragedy here isn't that he was wrong, but that his "facts" were always a secondary concern to the political utility they provided, allowing a fraudulent talking point to outlive its own debunking. Ultimately, the Phillips case should serve as a grim reminder for my colleagues that in this era, a compelling lie told loudly enough can travel halfway around the world before the truth even gets its boots on.