Meet Mark Davis. He’s a congressional candidate in Florida, running in the state’s 16th Congressional district. A few things to know about Mark: He’s a father, a small business owner, and a virulent anti-Trump Leftist.
One thing Mr. Davis is not is a noted IT professional.
Things began when Mark, on his social media accounts, helpfully pointed out to the public that when you type in a specific insightful web address, a curious development is witnessed.
This may be the last time I bring it up, but if you type https://t.co/wWWCf1RZsb into your search bar…well, just find out for yourself.
— Mark Davis for Congress (@MarkMadDogDavis) January 15, 2026
Somebody purchased the domain and redirected it to the DHS.
Hilarious….and accurate
Now, Mark was so excited about this “discovery” that he also posted a video showing you that this occurs. This is when things began to go sideways for the D.C. hopeful. As you see the screen that he helpfully shares in the clip, as he typed in the nefarious web address “Nazi.US”, we also got a glimpse of his search history in a dropdown window. Other terms with the German party appear, as does a complete address previously visited for web site creator GoDaddy.
Here is Florida Democrat @MarkMadDogDavis touting that a URL with “Nazi” in the address takes you to the DHS homepage.
— Brad Slager: CNN+ Lifetime Subscriber (@MartiniShark) January 16, 2026
He was caught being the one who fabricated this domain link. pic.twitter.com/kDHeITr2YW
It took the barest sleuthing by others to find out that, yes, Mr. Davis was the one who registered this address. He even used his campaign website to secure that domain. Yet there he was on social media boards pretending it was a curious discovery. In his video, he introduces it as “Internet secrets you didn’t know existed — Part one!” After he was called out for the obvious staging, we never seem to get “Part 2” of his series of web discoveries.
Davis also seems to have been shopping his discovery to news outlets, and one actually bit. At TMZ, they reported on the “Exclusive Details!” of this web phenomenon and displayed equally stunted computer dexterity. The copy says, “There’s a big question mark” concerning the domain ownership, when 15 seconds of applied searching would have shown them.
We also see that computer skills are not Mark’s only arena where he is lacking. His campaign is facing some challenges. Back in October, when he announced his run, Davis touted himself as a Democrat. Looking over his campaign website, however, there is no party designation to be found, and his initial fundraising page on the Democratic Party portal Act Blue is a dead end.
It turns out Davis had initially registered as an independent (No Party Affiliation), and this wrinkle precluded him from being able to access the Democrats' favored fundraising pipeline. This being the reality, it is not too surprising to see a struggling candidate resorting to desperate stunts to achieve traction with voters.
As a result of his challenged skills at web notoriety, Davis has been reduced to hostilities on social media. He has been reduced to insisting he always intended to lay claim to his web portal stunt, and he is throwing scorn towards those pointing out his efforts. Being a divisive figure is certainly a creative move in a campaign, at a time when most candidates are striving to appeal to as wide a voting base as possible:
Warning: language.
I’m sorry (not really) ya’ll MAGA’s are fucking idiots
— Mark Davis for Congress (@MarkMadDogDavis) January 16, 2026
Editor's Note: The mainstream media continues to deflect, gaslight, spin, and lie about President Trump, his administration, and conservatives.
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