WASHINGTON — Three House Republican committee chairmen accused ActBlue Tuesday of having “deliberately obstructed” their investigation into the Democratic fundraising platform following a bombshell report that suggested it misled Congress about its fraud safeguards during the 2024 election.
The leaders of the House Oversight, Judiciary and Administration committees sent a letter to ActBlue CEO Regina Wallace-Jones that cited an April 2 New York Times report revealing the platform “withheld materials responsive to the Committees’ subpoenas” in July 2025.
The report noted that the law firm Covington & Burling, which ActBlue had retained, cautioned in a February 2025 internal memo that it could “be alleged that ActBlue accepted and/or facilitated the acceptance of foreign-national contributions into American elections,” in violation of federal law.
Following a video call involving ActBlue leadership and Covington lawyers, the platform’s interim general counsel Aaron Ting resigned and warned leadership was “not fully committed to transparently addressing with the Board the seriousness of our most pressing concerns: the legal compliance of ActBlue’s past practices for screening political donations from abroad and its past representations to Congress regarding foreign donations and related matters,” according to the Times.
Days later, another ActBlue lawyer, Zain Ahmad, “alleged that he had been retaliated against for blowing the whistle on internal misconduct,” per Tuesday’s letter.
More than half-a-dozen ActBlue senior officials resigned in all following the warning from legal counsel.
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The GOP chairmen’s years-long probe had uncovered evidence that ActBlue made donation standards “more lenient” during the 2024 cycle, The Post first reported, with internal records showing as much as 6.4% of all gifts could have flowed from illicit sources.
“Recent reporting by the New York Times confirms our initial findings and strongly suggests that ActBlue deliberately obstructed the Committees’ investigation, including through misleading statements and noncompliance with our subpoenas,” wrote Oversight Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.), Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and Administration Chairman Bryan Steil (R-Wis.).
“This has impeded the Committees’ ability to develop legislation protecting our elections against fraudulent political contributions and foreign interference.”
ActBlue has facilitated nearly $19 billion in spending on Democratic campaigns and causes since 2004.
Spokesperson De’Andra Roberts-LaBoo previously said in a statement: “The reality is that ActBlue CEO, Regina Wallace-Jones, never made false statements to Congress, as confirmed by several in-house and outside attorneys — including the very sources who are now offering a different story to the press.”
ActBlue informed the committees in an October 2025 letter that it had handed over “[a]ll non-privileged documents with responsive, relevant information,” in response to a subpoena three months’ prior.
The House committees also subpoenaed three of ActBlue’s lawyers and two employees of the AI-powered fraud prevention software firm Sift who had worked with the platform, The Post previously reported.
The chairmen are now asking the Democratic fundraising juggernaut to fully comply with their subpoena by April 28.
They’ve requested “[a]ll documents and communications referring or relating to the potential or actual use of ActBlue by foreign nationals to make political contributions” and “[a]ll documents and communications referring or relating to ActBlue’s policies, practices, or procedures for preventing, deterring, or detecting political contributions by foreign nationals” since Jan. 1, 2020.
“Absent these steps, the Committees are prepared to use available mechanisms to enforce our subpoenas,” Comer, Jordan and Steil warned.
A House GOP aide told The Post that “all options” are on the table for compelling ActBlue to cooperate with the probe, including bringing Wallace-Jones or board members in to testify as well as contempt of Congress proceedings.
ActBlue didn’t make contributors provide a card verification value (CVV) for debit, credit or prepaid gift card transactions until January 2024 — around halfway through the election cycle, other records obtained by the chairmen’s investigation showed.
It also shifted standards twice in the election year — and still instructed employees to “look for reasons to accept contributions.”
Kimberly Peeler-Allen, who serves as chairwoman of ActBlue’s board of directors, claimed to the Times “less than 1%” of donations in the 2024 cycle came from from foreign donors.
But the Republican-led inquiry turned up at least 237 overseas transactions using prepaid cards between September and October 2024 — including from Brazil, Colombia, India, Iraq, the Philippines, and Saudi Arabia among other nations, according to an April 2025 interim report.
That same month, President Trump signed a memo that has prompted a Department of Justice investigation into whether illicit “straw donors” or foreign funds made their way into federal campaigns.
Reps for ActBlue did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
