Hundreds of U.S. counties have more registered voters than living people who are eligible

Swordsmyth

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RealClear Politics' investigative unit published an in-depth analysis Thursday, revealing the widespread practice of counties nationwide who refuse to clean up their voter rolls. The report showed Los Angeles is California's worst offender, and further found that 400 counties out of America's 2,800 "have voter registration rates over 100 percent."
Author Mark Hemingway wrote, "In sum, America's voter rolls are a mess — and everyone knows it. While voter registration rates are over 100 percent are not proof of fraud, they certainly create opportunities that otherwise wouldn't exist, such as voting twice in different precincts or the potential for requesting and filling out absentee ballots."

Much of Hemingway's piece echoes the concerns of attorney David Roland, who proved election fraud in St. Louis after the 2016 election. Roland revealed widespread violations of absentee ballot laws in a scheme used against his client, Missouri House candidate Bruce Franks, who lost his primary election to a fellow Democrat.


That case was further bolstered by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, which found specific examples of the misdoings. A new election was held, and Franks won in a landslide.

Roland told TheBlaze, "We would all like to believe that our public officials are conducting fair and lawful elections, but the risks and the consequences of election fraud are so significant that citizens have to look over their shoulders."


Hemingway also addressed the contentious 2018 gubernatorial race, "where Democrat Stacey Abrams has still not formally conceded to now-Gov. Brian Kemp, because during his tenure as secretary of state, she observed, 'more than a million citizens found their names stripped from the rolls.'"
According to National Review columnist Dan McLaughlin, Democrats view such tidying up as a violation of prospective voters' rights. He retweeted Hemingway's article Thursday, saying, "According to Democratic Party orthodoxy, it's 'voter suppression' to remove people from the rolls who are not citizens, not residents, or not living. In the real world, keeping the voter rolls up to date is just good government."

McLaughlin further noted, "The fact that Los Angeles County has 1.6 million more registered voters than eligible voters is a California problem. In a national popular vote system, it could become a national problem. 1.6 million is larger than the population of 11 states."

More at: https://www.theblaze.com/news/ripe-...re-registered-voters-than-those-even-eligible
 
If you moved and did not notify the voter registration you are no longer there, you will still appear on the voter rolls. Sure, it is relatively easy to have more registered voters than people- especially if people tend to move a lot. There are also people who are dead and did not notify the local voter registration that they will not be participating in upcoming elections.

Author Mark Hemingway wrote, "In sum, America's voter rolls are a mess — and everyone knows it. While voter registration rates are over 100 percent are not proof of fraud, they certainly create opportunities that otherwise wouldn't exist, such as voting twice in different precincts or the potential for requesting and filling out absentee ballots."
 
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If you moved and did not notify the voter registration you are no longer there, you will still appear on the voter rolls. Sure, it is relatively easy to have more registered voters than people- especially if people tend to move a lot.

Yes, they should put chips in everyone so as to better track this. :sarcasm:
or how about you bring proof of citizenship to the voting booth when you vote. I mean ffs they check my ID when I buy Sudafed because I have a cold or buy dry ice to chill drinks in a cooler when I fish.
 
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If you moved and did not notify the voter registration you are no longer there, you will still appear on the voter rolls. Sure, it is relatively easy to have more registered voters than people- especially if people tend to move a lot.

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If you moved and did not notify the voter registration you are no longer there, you will still appear on the voter rolls. Sure, it is relatively easy to have more registered voters than people- especially if people tend to move a lot.

LA county is the welfare leader of the west coast , so we know fraud is rampant there because it goes with the territory . So now the fraud leader is also California leader in fraud opportunity voter rolls . Votes there should probably not be counted except local elections .
 
LA county is the welfare leader of the west coast , so we know fraud is rampant there because it goes with the territory . So now the fraud leader is also California leader in fraud opportunity voter rolls . Votes there should probably not be counted except local elections .

From the original article: https://www.realclearinvestigations...0/who_will_clean_up_americas_voter_rolls.html

Although the issue has become politicized, the counties and states where voter registrations exceed 100% represent a wide cross-section of urban and rural counties, as well as areas dominated by Republicans and Democrats. Much of this is simply the result of negligence in keeping voter rolls up to date
 
Drivers’ licenses have to be renewed every few years. Voter registration should be, too.
 
We can renew our licenses on line. People who apply for drivers licenses can register to vote. They should be able to renew their voter registration every time the license renews.
 
We can renew our licenses on line. People who apply for drivers licenses can register to vote. They should be able to renew their voter registration every time the license renews.
Just as long as they have to provide physical proof of their residence and citizenship at some point every election.
 
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