Scott Presler, the grassroots conservative organizer who became one of the most recognized names in Republican voter registration, has won his first election.

Presler was elected to the Republican State Committee representing Beaver County, Pennsylvania, in Tuesday’s primary.

The man who spent years registering voters and building out early-vote operations across battleground states now has a formal seat inside Pennsylvania’s GOP machinery.

Presler confirmed the news on X, calling it the first time he has ever run for office.

According to Beaver County’s official May 2026 Summary Report, Presler received 7,853 votes in the REP STATE COMMITTEE race, finishing alongside running mate Amy Demboski, who led the field with 8,219 votes.

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The official Beaver County report shows the race details in the county’s own numbers:

The May 2026 Summary Report lists the contest as REP STATE COMMITTEE, with 36,845 total votes recorded across the field. Amy Demboski finished with 8,219 votes, or 22.31%, while Scott Presler finished with 7,853 votes, or 21.31%.

The same county table lists Paula Barry at 3,670 votes, Steve Aichele at 3,364 votes, and Raymond Santillo at 3,294 votes, placing Demboski and Presler at the top of the official Beaver County results. The county result matters because it anchors the story in the actual election record, not just the online celebration around Presler’s win in Pennsylvania.

In other words, the headline here is not just that Presler announced a victory. Beaver County’s own posted election summary shows the vote totals that put him into the Republican State Committee race’s winning group.

The county’s published numbers also show why the story moved quickly among Republican activists: Presler’s win was backed by a clear official vote count in one of Pennsylvania’s closely watched western counties.

Both cleared 7,000 votes and secured their seats.

Trending Politics added context on how the win landed inside the conservative movement:

Presler is the president of Early Vote Action and has spent years building a national profile through Republican voter registration, early-vote work, and on-the-ground organizing in Pennsylvania and other battleground states. His win Tuesday gives him a formal role inside the Pennsylvania GOP structure after years of pushing Republicans to compete harder before Election Day.

The race paired Presler with Amy Demboski, who also won a Republican State Committee seat in Beaver County. Together, they finished first and second in the contest, with both clearing the 7,000-vote mark in a multi-candidate field.

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That is why conservatives online treated the result as more than a small local committee race. Presler has been one of the loudest voices telling Republicans to register voters, bank votes early, and organize at the county level.

Now he has a seat at the table in a critical Pennsylvania county.

The seat sits inside the Republican Party, where committee members help shape the machinery, priorities, and ground game of the state GOP.

For a grassroots organizer focused on ballots, precincts, turnout, and party mechanics, that is exactly the kind of post that matters.

Presler said he plans to bring agenda items directly to Beaver County voters before state committee votes, polling and speaking with constituents so the seat actually represents them.

He thanked Beaver County for placing their trust in him and said he takes the role seriously.

Presler became a major conservative figure through his voter-registration drives and early-vote organizing in Pennsylvania and other swing states. He built a ground-level operation that focused on the kind of blocking and tackling that wins elections before Election Day even arrives.

Now the guy who built the machine from the outside has a vote on the inside.

That is how you change a state party from within.

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This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.

 

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