Eric Swalwell is at it again. While most Americans are just trying to keep up with soaring grocery prices, the Democrat from California is busy juggling “side hustles.” You’d think hauling in nearly $400,000 a year between his massive congressional paycheck and his wife’s fancy consulting gig would be enough—especially for a guy who wants to run the state of California. But apparently not.
What makes this even more suspicious? Swalwell’s latest moonlighting gig was for a so-called “global production company.” And this isn’t just any Hollywood side project. It’s run by former top intelligence officials from the U.S. and U.K., plus a bunch of seasoned Hollywood elites. That’s right—the swampiest crew you can imagine, with a direct pipeline from the spy agencies to Tinseltown, now in bed with a sitting congressman.
Even more disturbing is that one of the ringleaders of this company is none other than John Sipher—a former CIA man best known for promoting the disgraceful Steele dossier, that pile of lies cooked up to smear President Trump. The Steele dossier kicked off years of dirty tricks, media collusion, and wasted taxpayer dollars chasing after Russian witch hunts. And now we’re supposed to believe this is just an innocent business gig between buddies?
Why does Swalwell—a guy already knee-deep in Democrat corruption, who infamously cozied up with a Chinese spy—have time for these shadowy jobs? Is it about more money, or is it about more power? Why is he so eager to hang out with former intelligence bosses who specialize in shaping public opinion? And just what, exactly, is he doling out to the globalist crowd behind closed doors?
California deserves leaders focused on real problems—not political side hustles with ex-CIA operatives and global elites. This is the club of people who want to control what you see, hear, and believe. Swalwell’s priorities say it all. If you can’t trust him to put America first while he’s in Congress, why on earth would you trust him with the keys to the Golden State? Maybe the real question isn’t “Why is he working these side hustles?”—maybe it’s “Who still thinks this guy is working for us?”
Source: Redstate
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