Jackson, NJ — A bombshell report by Nick Sortor has hit X exposing Congressman Eric Swalwell—again—for reckless behavior that makes him a security risk. His past ties to a Chinese spy, Fang Fang, should have ended his career, yet he remains in power, compromised and vulnerable. Most notably, the beleaguered congressman hurled lies at President Trump during his first term Ukraine-call impeachment. Now that we have seen how China benefited during the Biden administration, perhaps his dishonest statements were somehow connected to the “honey pot” operation that China was conducting to control him.
In the videos released last night, he can been seen seemingly drunk, circled by lobbyists, touting his desire to divulge intelligence to fulfill his part in a bargain to assist him to cheat on his wife.
But Swalwell isn’t alone. Here in New Jersey, failed governor candidate, Jack Ciattarelli, having admitted to multiple extramarital affairs, raises similar red flags. A man who can’t be trusted to be honest, can’t be trusted with power. For years, rumors have swirled that Ciattarelli is making backroom deals and enabling establishment corruption. But now, a darker question emerges—was it greed and power-lust, or has he been compromised? Commenting on the story, one pundit wrote, “When a politician is that reckless, blackmail isn’t just a possibility—it’s likely.”
A direct threat to voters: It’s not about an ended marriage. Sadly, marriages end all the time. It’s the lies and deception. Politicians keeping naughty secrets are vulnerable and hence dangerous. If they fear being exposed, they’ll betray the public. New Jersey and America deserve leaders with integrity, not men who can be bought or manipulated.
Voters beware: a compromised leader serves his own interests—not yours.


