@SpukiKitty
My understanding is that Trump isn't a Russian puppet. A Newsweek article from shortly before the election, "Why Vladimir Putin's Russia is Backing Donald Trump," shows that Trump is out of their control (as well as everyone else's), but they support him mainly because his thoughtless aggression will alienate our allies and weaken our influence worldwide. His Russian-friendly attitude and the Russian ties of many of his advisors certainly won't help, but I don't think Putin will actually be running the United States. He'll just profit from the incompetence of the people who do run it.
And I have no idea who you should talk to about Trump's Russian connections. Aside from the people who are already steadfastly opposed to Trump, the country seems to be ignoring this issue because they don't see the difference between it and any other partisan accusation against him. The executive agencies aren't supposed to directly involve themselves in politics and most of the ones that deal with national security (FBI, CIA, NSA) have a strong conservative bias. It's a sign of how strong the CIA's case must be that it's released the information about the Russian hacking at all, but now it's kicked the ball into the political arena, and any resistance to Trump is going to happen there.
A few of the electors from states that voted for him might be swayed, but for an elector to go against the vote of the state is counter to tradition and, in some states, law; look up the term "faithless elector." And the ones from states that voted for Trump are all steadfast Republicans, so it will be very hard to persuade enough of them to change their votes before time runs out on December 19. Once Trump is in office, the only body that has real power over him is Congress, which is Republican-controlled and doesn't want to get rid of a president whose cabinet is practically their wish list. If Trump's inevitable blunders make him hugely unpopular, the Republican Congress might point to him as a scapegoat, impeach him, and replace him with Pence. Most likely, though, there's very little ability to stop Trump, especially on foreign policy, until the next election in 2018.