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Can You Run a Campaign from a PO Box?
California Globe ^ | 3/21/26 | Jay Rogers

Posted on 03/21/2026 2:36:34 PM PDT by Bullish

***Public records show no California property ownership or lease in Eric Swalwell’s name across fourteen years of congressional financial disclosures***

When Eric Swalwell filed his November 2025 statement of intention for the California governorship, he listed a Sacramento attorney’s office address — not a home, not a lease, not a street where neighbors might wave at him in the driveway. His campaign explained the choice as a security measure. That may well be true. But it raises a question California voters cannot afford to ignore: Can a man genuinely govern thirty-nine million people when he cannot publicly commit to a mailing address where he actually sleeps?

The post office box is not mere administrative sloppiness. It is a symbol. And in Swalwell’s case, the symbol accurately reflects the candidate — a troubling trifecta of questionable residency, a decade-long pattern of entanglement with Beijing-connected figures, and a policy platform that doubles down on every idea that already drove California to the edge of the cliff.

The California Constitution requires gubernatorial candidates to have resided in the state for five years immediately preceding the election. Swalwell’s voter registration lists a Livermore home belonging to relatives of a political mentor. Public records show no California property ownership or lease in his name across fourteen years of congressional financial disclosures. A lease at the Livermore address materialized only after a January 2026 legal petition challenged his eligibility and public scrutiny intensified. The Department of Justice has separately opened an inquiry into whether Rep. Swalwell committed mortgage fraud by declaring his Washington, D.C. home as his primary residence. He denies it. But the geometry is instructive: a candidate who sleeps mostly in Washington, votes from a borrowed East Bay address, and files candidate paperwork at his lawyer’s downtown Sacramento office is asking Californians to trust him as their full-time chief executive. Frequent flyer miles are not roots. They are receipts.

The residency problem would be disqualifying on its own. The national security dimension makes it alarming. Axios reported in December 2020 that Christine Fang — a Chinese national believed by U.S. intelligence to be an operative of the Ministry of State Security — had cultivated Swalwell from his days on the Dublin city council, bundled donations for his 2014 re-election campaign, and helped place an intern in his congressional office. Speaker Kevin McCarthy cited the association to remove Swalwell from the House Intelligence Committee in 2023. A House Ethics review found no wrongdoing. But “no finding of wrongdoing” and “no cause for concern” are not synonyms. A Chinese intelligence operative successfully penetrated the donor network of a sitting member of the committee that oversees the CIA. That is the factual record.

More recent events are harder to dismiss. Fox News Digital reported that Swalwell’s gubernatorial campaign has accepted more than $40,000 from Keliang “Clay” Zhu, a partner at DeHeng Law Offices — a firm whose institutional lineage traces to a subsidiary of the Chinese Communist Party’s own Ministry of Justice. Zhu’s professional biography advertises facilitating more than $9 billion in Chinese state enterprise investment in U.S. technology sectors. Swalwell is now seeking to govern California’s ports, Silicon Valley corridors, and defense-adjacent agriculture. The pattern of engagement with Beijing-linked money, stretching across a decade, deserves a direct answer from the candidate. He has not provided one.

Swalwell’s campaign platform frames the next governor’s job as fighting the federal administration and delivering “homes and jobs.” Both poll well. Neither engages seriously with how California arrived at its current condition. The 2024 HUD point-in-time count found approximately 187,000 homeless Californians — one in four homeless Americans in a state representing one in nine of the national population. Swalwell proposes no reform of Proposition 47, no expansion of involuntary treatment authority, and no specific permitting overhaul. He proposes, in essence, more spending on programs that have produced a quarter century of documented failure.

The corporate exodus makes the same point in dollar terms. Tesla left Palo Alto for Austin. Chevron left San Ramon for Houston. Yamaha announced this year it is relocating its U.S. headquarters from Cypress to Georgia. U-Haul ranked California dead last in net migration for the sixth consecutive year. Swalwell’s answer to this evidence is to litigate against Washington. Litigating in federal court does not reduce California’s 13.3% top marginal income tax rate. Impeachment theater does not streamline CEQA permitting.

California remains one of the most naturally advantaged places on Earth. Its damage is not irreversible. But reversing it requires a governor who lives here, who can name the specific statutes that need changing, and whose donor network does not owe its institutional origin to a foreign adversary’s Ministry of Justice.

Eric Swalwell’s campaign will generate cable news segments and applause at party conventions. The post office box at the center of his paperwork tells a quieter story: when the address you give the Secretary of State is a law office, and the address you give your mortgage lender is Washington, and the address you give Beijing-linked donors is wherever the money flows — your relationship with California is transactional, not residential. The state deserves a governor who actually lives here. Preferably one who can prove it.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: democratcorruption; democrattreason; election; fangfang; globohomo; governor; swallwell

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These cretinous democrats are beyond shameless.
1 posted on 03/21/2026 2:36:34 PM PDT by Bullish
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To: Bullish
Can You Run a Campaign from a PO Box?

I don't think so...I don't think too many people could fit into one of those...

2 posted on 03/21/2026 2:40:17 PM PDT by Republican Wildcat
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To: Bullish

Why not, since you can run one from your basement.


3 posted on 03/21/2026 2:44:18 PM PDT by mass55th (“Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway.” ― John Wayne)
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To: Republican Wildcat

This is the better way to do it.

4 posted on 03/21/2026 2:45:12 PM PDT by ClearCase_guy
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To: Bullish

If Californians really want to scrape a barrel that already contains Gavin Newsom, Tom Steyer and Katie Porter, at the very bottom, deep in the sludge, they will find squatting the creepy, loathsome Eric Swalwell. And they will probably elect him Governor in a landslide.


5 posted on 03/21/2026 3:03:49 PM PDT by Orosius
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To: Orosius

Swallwell’s leading all of them last time I checked which completely amazes me. The dem voters must care nothing about their own futures, they just think they’ll get free stuff.


6 posted on 03/21/2026 3:17:07 PM PDT by Bullish (My tagline ran off with another man, but it's okay... I wasn't married to it.)
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To: Bullish

If you look back in history on cases of challenged residency in congressional districts if you have put one toe across the district boundary line, you qualify it seems.


7 posted on 03/21/2026 3:48:57 PM PDT by Az Joe (The Confederate State of Minnesota. Down with the rebels!)
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To: Bullish

Constitutional Context

Article I, Section 2, Clause 2: Defines that a representative must be an inhabitant of the state in which they are chosen.


8 posted on 03/21/2026 3:55:08 PM PDT by Az Joe (The Confederate State of Minnesota. Down with the rebels!)
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To: Republican Wildcat

“...I don’t think too many people could fit into one of those...”

Don’t have to. But the group of them that use it can vote one at a time to elect someone.

wy69


9 posted on 03/21/2026 4:12:37 PM PDT by whitney69 (gave)
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To: Az Joe

I think that was the moot point of the entire article, right? The headline was obviously rhetorical.


10 posted on 03/21/2026 4:15:01 PM PDT by Bullish (My tagline ran off with another man, but it's okay... I wasn't married to it.)
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To: Bullish

What?


11 posted on 03/21/2026 4:28:07 PM PDT by Az Joe (The Confederate State of Minnesota. Down with the rebels!)
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