Scott Presler — the grassroots conservative organizer the left has mocked, smeared, and tried to cancel for years — just won his first election. The president of Early Vote Action pulled in 7,853 votes to claim a seat on the Republican State Committee for Beaver County, Pennsylvania.
The most hated Republican volunteer in America is now an elected Republican official. Somewhere, a Democratic operative just choked on their latte.
As 100 Percent Fed Up reported, Presler and his running mate Amy Demboski dominated the race in the May 20 primary. Demboski topped the ticket with 8,219 votes — 22.31% of 36,845 total ballots cast — while Presler grabbed 21.31%. The rest of the field wasn't even close: Paula Barry pulled 3,670 votes, Steve Aichele managed 3,364, and Raymond Santillo came in at 3,294.
That's not a win. That's a stomping.
Presler didn't waste any time after the results came in. "Yes, I was elected to the State Committee for Beaver County, Pennsylvania," he said. "This is the first time I've run for office. I promise to bring up agenda items to voters BEFORE the State Committee votes on issues. I promise to do polls & speak with voters in Beaver County."
Notice what he didn't say? He didn't say he'd go along to get along. He didn't promise to play nice with the establishment. He promised to actually talk to voters before making decisions. Revolutionary concept, apparently.
Presler also added: "Thank you to Beaver County, Pennsylvania, for placing your trust in me. I take this role very seriously & will fulfill every single campaign promise I made going into the election."
For those who don't know the backstory, Scott Presler is the guy who spent years organizing voter registration drives across the country, including the ones that helped flip Pennsylvania for Trump. He cleaned up trash in Democratic cities — literally showed up with garbage bags and gloves — to make a point about what happens when leftists run things. The media treated him like a joke. Democrats pretended he didn't exist. Twitter tried to memory-hole him.
And now he's on the Republican State Committee in a state that decides presidential elections.
This is what the ground game looks like when it actually works. Not consultants in D.C. burning through donor cash on cable ads nobody watches. Not establishment hacks who haven't knocked on a door since 2004. A guy who registered voters one at a time, picked up trash in neighborhoods the Democrats abandoned, and built a movement from the sidewalk up.
The left should be terrified. Not because one guy won a state committee seat in Beaver County — but because of what it represents. The grassroots conservative movement isn't just making noise anymore. It's winning elections. The people who do the actual work are starting to hold the actual power.
First the volunteer list. Then the voter rolls. Now the ballot.
Scott Presler is just getting started.

