AOC's Performance Abroad Is Why Right Wing Parties Keep Rising
The Muslim Dog Hate Scandal
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Isn't Happy With the Coverage of Her Trip to Munich
Digital Asset Platform Nexo Returns to the U.S.
Gavin Newsom Vows to Combat the 'Climate Crisis'
You Should Listen to Bishop Robert Barron's Rebuke of AOC's Marxist Philosophy
An Illegal Immigrant Tried to Drown a Woman in Florida
After Attacking Dog Ownership, Nerdeen Kiswani Does Damage Control
New Mexico Gun Control Group Has Issues with Proposed Assault Weapon Ban
Ohio Democrats Push Gun Bill Only Democrats Stupid Enough to Push
DHS Firebrand Spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin To Step Down Next Week
Georgia RINO Candidate Rick Jackson Shares This Controversial Policy with Kamala Harris
You Won't Believe the Voter Fraud Nick Shirley Uncovered in CA: One Woman's...
The Case Of The Man Who Got Deported For His Billie Eilish Joke...
Scott Jennings Blasts Dems’ Munich Showing, Says Rubio ‘Gave the Speech of a...
Tipsheet
Premium

Jim Jordan Blasts MLB Commissioner's Decision in Scathing Letter

Jim Jordan Blasts MLB Commissioner's Decision in Scathing Letter
AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

Major League Baseball (MLB) recently gained national attention for an issue unrelated to baseball: boycotting the state of Georgia. The league decided to relocate its annual All-Star Game and Draft out of Atlanta in protest of the state’s newly-signed voting reform law. 

Democrats spearheaded a wide-ranging misinformation campaign about the law, likening the reforms to “voter suppression” and “Jim Crow in the 21st century.” In reality, the bill increases accessibility to the ballot box, and the new location for the game, selected by the league, has stricter voting laws than the Peach State. 

Led by Congressman Jim Jordan (R-OH), House GOP lawmakers took note of all of this in a scathing letter to MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, who fell for the Democrat lies about the bill. 

“MLB’s decision to insert itself in Georgia’s election laws was based on inaccurate and politicized information. Although Democrats and some woke corporate elites like to claim that the new Georgia law constitutes ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ and ‘voter suppression,’ these claims are false and unfounded,” the letter reads. “While MLB has criticized Georgia, it has raised no similar concerns about the election laws in Colorado, the new location of the All-Star Game, or in New York, the state of MLB’s headquarters—even though those states have more restrictive election laws than Georgia. For example, Georgia’s new law provides 17 days of early voting while Colorado has only 15 days. New York, similarly, only provides early voting ten days before the election and does not allow for no-excuse absentee voting. With respect to voter identification—which partisan advocates cited as a particular concern about Georgia’s new law—Colorado, like Georgia, requires voter identification for in-person voting and first-time mail-in voters”

The league’s tone-deaf move will ultimately cost Georgia an estimated $100 million in lost revenue due to the canceled events. Republicans naturally criticized the league’s decision, which was based on a false narrative about the law’s reform measures. 

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos