Dominion Voting Systems has recently been purchased by a former election official and election integrity activist Scott Leiendecker. The company is now changing its name to Liberty Vote and will now be 100% based in America. The company promises to create “paper-based transparency, security and simplicity” to help restore election integrity. The action is sure to be a blow to DNC efforts to “assure” outcomes “for the good of the whole.”
In what appears to be a huge win for election integrity, the notorious Dominion Voting Systems has been sold to a longtime advocate for election reform.
Former Republican election official Scott Leiendecker is now the sole owner of Dominion.
This is a new chapter for Dominion, which is now called Liberty Vote and based 100% in the United States, out of Missouri.
Take a look:
BREAKING: Former GOP election official buys Dominion Voting Systems, promises ‘paper-based transparency’https://t.co/EVsdQoLJ5D
— Jack Poso 🇺🇸 (@JackPosobiec) October 9, 2025
Leiendecker has promised to prioritize “paper-based transparency, security and simplicity” — which is long overdue and sounds very promising!
Axios reported:
Zoom in: Liberty Vote purchased Canada-based Dominion for an undisclosed sum, according to a person familiar with the transaction.
- Liberty is a new company owned by Scott Leiendecker, who in 2011 created a software program focused on enabling election workers to verify voters and check them in at polling locations.
- According to Leiendecker’s LinkedIn page, his company KNOWiNK has more than 150 employees and $55 million in annual revenue.
- The company says its systems are used by election officials in more than a third of U.S. states and describes itself as the “nation’s leading provider of electronic poll books.”
