With national and state midterm elections coming in 2026, many voters still have questions about the integrity of U.S. elections.
A new Alabama group, Concerned Citizens for Election Integrity, says it plans to address those concerns by hosting a public presentation this Saturday, Dec. 6, featuring election data expert Douglas G. Frank.
Frank is scheduled to speak and take questions starting at 10 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 6, at the Tillman’s Corner Senior Center at 5863 Nevius Road in Mobile. Admission is free, and no ticket or RSVP is required.
Organizers describe the event as an informative community meeting with a watchful eye on what could be next for Alabama elections and election procedures.
The description of the program reads:
With major decisions on the horizon for Alabama’s election, families and future, we are inviting citizens, parents, pastors and community leaders to gather Saturday, Dec. 6 for an informative presentation focused on election integriy and preparing for the possibility of returning to paper ballots, hand-counted.
The presentation is designed to inform all attendees, not just for political insiders but for everyday Alabamians who care about election integrity and who choose to be informed and engaged.
The presentation will feature Dr. Douglas G. Frank, a nationally recognized election integrity researcher and data analyst, who will outline current vulnerabilities in U.S. election systems, explain proven reforms to safeguard voter confidence, and share practical strategies citizens can begin using now to enhance transparency and trust in the voting process.
Dr. Frank is famous for having discovered algorithms in our voter rolls that gave him an unnatural ability to accurately predict election outcomes of the 2020 election by age groups in every county of every state, including Alabama. As he likes to say, “That ain’t natural, buddy!”
That discovery is but one of the indications that our election systems are, at minimum, vulnerable to manipulation. It also indicates that, in 2020, the vulnerability was exploited. Since nothing has been done to correct the vulnerability, we can assume we still have elections that are ripe for manipulation.
Speaking in Huntsville, Alabama recently, Dr. Frank talked about the Alabama voter rolls.
“The unnatural ‘churn’, or ‘pump and dump’ as others call it, found in voter rolls of every county of every state in the country is occurring in Alabama’s voter rolls as well,” Wayne Christopher of Mobile, one of the organizers of the effort, says.
“Alabama’s voter rolls indicate a four-year median churn of 42.1%. An unidentified influence outside of County Registrars is inflating the voter rolls of every county with illegitimate registrations prior to every election and then removing them following every election. The illegitimate registrations provide a credit line of registrants that can be used to cast ballots and influence the outcome of any election.”
“Those seeking a solution should notice that this problem began about 2012 when county officials lost control of their voter rolls and the states took control and consolidated them into one large database,” Christopher concludes.
Jim Zig Zeigler is a contributing writer for Yellowhammer News. His beat includes the positive and colorful about Alabama – her people, events, groups and prominent deaths. He is a former State Auditor and Public Service Commissioner. You can reach him at [email protected]

