You all know voter fraud isn't real

pecksniff

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The W Admin spent 8 years hunting for it and even fired U.S. Attorneys who weren't enthusiastic enough about that project. They never came up with anything. No noncitizens are voting. Nobody is voting twice under different names. Nobody is impersonating the dead.

Why would anyone try it anyway? Comparing risk and effort to personal payoff, voter fraud is like forging a Bed, Bath and Beyond coupon.

There might be one or two identifiable instances, but never enough to change the outcome of an election.
 
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The W Admin spent 8 years hunting for it and even fired U.S. Attorneys who weren't enthusiastic enough about that project. They never came up with anything. No noncitizens are voting. Nobody is voting twice under different names. Nobody is impersonating the dead.

Why would anyone try it anyway? Comparing risk and effort to personal payoff, voter fraud is like forging a Bed, Bath and Beyond coupon.

There might be one or two identifiable instances, but never enough to change the outcome of an election.

Hard to imagine there are actual people in the United States, as fucking dumb as you!
 
The W Admin spent 8 years hunting for it and even fired U.S. Attorneys who weren't enthusiastic enough about that project. They never came up with anything. No noncitizens are voting. Nobody is voting twice under different names. Nobody is impersonating the dead.

Why would anyone try it anyway? Comparing risk and effort to personal payoff, voter fraud is like forging a Bed, Bath and Beyond coupon.

There might be one or two identifiable instances, but never enough to change the outcome of an election.

Why is it that every time we hear of someone being prosecuted for election fraud of some sort, they’re all Democrats?
 
Why is it that every time we hear of someone being prosecuted for election fraud of some sort, they’re all Democrats?

Because you only pay attention to the stories you like...plenty of Republicans using their dead mother's to vote for Trump
 
Nobody is voting twice under different names. Nobody is impersonating the dead.

Yes they are. At least two (R) voters have been convicted of voting for their dead parent. (R) voters were charged with trucking boxes of ballots from NJ to PA to be dropped in ballot boxes. A Texan (wife of a GA ball player and senate hopeful) expressed dismay she could vote in both TX and GA since they own house in both states. Unsure yet if she did vote in both or if she will be charged.

That's four off the top of my head, but I know there have been more.

And we have the whole AZ 'audit' thing, which is a clear attempt at fraud.
 
We don't. Because that's a lie. Who do you think you're fooling?

LibTards are the most UNINFORMED people on the planet! They are all poster children for “low information voters!”

This is a database, only four years old, of prosecuted and convicted cases of voter fraud!

About 1,300 cases so far and the America’s Audit (AZ) are not included! Arizona WILL decertify its 2020 electors! What happens after that, who knows. Maybe GA, PA, WI and MI follow suit! Then what, smart (actually dumb as fuck) guy?

https://www.heritage.org/voterfraud
 
"You have people registered in two states. They're registered in New York and New Jersey. They vote twice. There are millions of votes, in my opinion. Now, I'm gonna do an investigation."
—— President Trump, January 2017

Steve Bannon was registered in California and Florida.

Sean Spicer was registered in Rhode Island and Virginia.

Steve Mnuchin was registered in New York and California.

Jared Kushner was registered in New York and New Jersey.

And Tiffany Trump was registered in New York and Pennsylvania.
 
Why is it that every time we hear of someone being prosecuted for election fraud of some sort, they’re all Democrats?

claims he did it as a joke
A mail carrier in West Virginia pled guilty to changing the party registration on eight absentee ballot requests from Democratic to Republican

homas Cooper entered the plea in federal court in Elkins to attempted election fraud and injury to the mail, U.S. Attorney Bill Powell said in a statement.

Cooper was charged in May after eight mail-in requests for absentee voter ballots had their party affiliations altered.
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/absentee-ballot-fraud-heritage/


WED, FEB 27TH, 2019 BY REUTERS
North Carolina Republican political operative charged in election fraud scheme

(Reuters) – The North Carolina Republican political operative at the center of an absentee ballot fraud scheme that prompted the state to order a re-run of a congressional election was arrested and charged with obstruction of justice on Wednesday, local media reported.
https://www.politicususa.com/2019/0...erative-charged-in-election-fraud-scheme.html

epublican lawmakers in Ohio pushing for more “safety and security” at the ballot box can now point to a clear example of voter fraud in the November 2020 presidential election.

Unfortunately for them, it involves another Republican.

Edward Snodgrass, who is a Porter Township trustee, has admitted to forging his dead father’s signature on an absentee ballot and then voting again as himself, court records and other sources revealed.

Snodgrass was busted after a Delaware County election worker questioned the signature on his father’s ballot. A subsequent investigation revealed the ballot had been mailed to H. Edward Snodgrass on Oct. 6 — a day after the 78-year-old retired businessman died.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-new...harge-voting-twice-november-election-n1271985

The Pennsylvania Capital-Star interviewed Grove to ask him about the 10 hearings he conducted on the 2020 vote, plus his sponsorship of legislation to eliminate absentee ballots while proposing voter ID. When reporter Stephen Caruso pressed Grove on his objections to the election results — asking him point-blank “Was there election fraud in 2020?”

Here’s how that went:

Grove: Yes, there was. They have confirmed cases of election fraud.

Caruso: Who committed that fraud in Pennsylvania?

Grove: Right, Republicans. But it’s still election fraud. It doesn’t matter who [commits] it.

Grove was further pressed on why he didn’t call out the lies that shrouded the 2020 election, and his response to that was “I can’t help people believe everything on the Internet.”

“There are a lot of bad accusations out there. We did our due diligence to try to address them when members had questions,” he continued. “People are going to believe what they believe.
https://www.mediaite.com/news/pa-re...uded-that-fraud-was-committed-by-republicans/

^^a quick search
more but i can't be arsed further
 
The W Admin spent 8 years hunting for it and even fired U.S. Attorneys who weren't enthusiastic enough about that project. They never came up with anything. No noncitizens are voting. Nobody is voting twice under different names. Nobody is impersonating the dead.

Why would anyone try it anyway? Comparing risk and effort to personal payoff, voter fraud is like forging a Bed, Bath and Beyond coupon.

There might be one or two identifiable instances, but never enough to change the outcome of an election.

They know it...it's the party line..aye Commrades?
 
^^^ And the Florida guy that hired a shill to run against a legitimate candidate with the same name.
 
"You have people registered in two states. They're registered in New York and New Jersey. They vote twice. There are millions of votes, in my opinion. Now, I'm gonna do an investigation."
—— President Trump, January 2017

Steve Bannon was registered in California and Florida.

Sean Spicer was registered in Rhode Island and Virginia.

Steve Mnuchin was registered in New York and California.

Jared Kushner was registered in New York and New Jersey.

And Tiffany Trump was registered in New York and Pennsylvania.

I don't suppose it's any crime to register in two jurisdictions, so long as you only vote in one.
 
I don't suppose it's any crime to register in two jurisdictions, so long as you only vote in one.

When you move to a new state and register to vote there, your former state is supposed to be notified and remove your name from their rolls. It rarely if ever happens, but that's not the voters' fault and unless they actually vote in both states, they're doing nothing wrong.
 
When you move to a new state and register to vote there, your former state is supposed to be notified and remove your name from their rolls. It rarely if ever happens, but that's not the voters' fault and unless they actually vote in both states, they're doing nothing wrong.

Some states require that you actively remove yourself from their rolls, though rarely people actually do this and mostly states don't pursue any reminder.
 
When you move to a new state and register to vote there, your former state is supposed to be notified and remove your name from their rolls. It rarely if ever happens, but that's not the voters' fault and unless they actually vote in both states, they're doing nothing wrong.

Some states require that you actively remove yourself from their rolls, though rarely people actually do this and mostly states don't pursue any reminder.

Automatic removal from one's former state's rolls would require some kind of national system, the idea of which makes RWs scream.
 
Automatic removal from one's former state's rolls would require some kind of national system, the idea of which makes RWs scream.

No, it wouldn't. A state could easily review residency records and at least put a rough system in place in an automated, independent fashion at the state level.
 
No, it wouldn't. A state could easily review residency records and at least put a rough system in place in an automated, independent fashion at the state level.

There are no "residency records" at the state level. A state is not notified when somebody leaves.
 
There are no "residency records" at the state level. A state is not notified when somebody leaves.

They keep track of where people live for taxes. They know. Either way, it would be good to have a system when a person registers, that it would send a notice to the previous state for removal.
 
They keep track of where people live for taxes. They know. Either way, it would be good to have a system when a person registers, that it would send a notice to the previous state for removal.

That would be doable -- just have a space on the form to specify previous residence.
 
The W Admin spent 8 years hunting for it and even fired U.S. Attorneys who weren't enthusiastic enough about that project. They never came up with anything. No noncitizens are voting. Nobody is voting twice under different names. Nobody is impersonating the dead.

Why would anyone try it anyway? Comparing risk and effort to personal payoff, voter fraud is like forging a Bed, Bath and Beyond coupon.

There might be one or two identifiable instances, but never enough to change the outcome of an election.

I know, I know

Are you about to teach the class elections for dummies?
 
Automatic removal from one's former state's rolls would require some kind of national system, the idea of which makes RWs scream.

This is why voter registrations are often tied to driver's licenses. When you move and get a new DL, the former state is notified so the old DL is cancelled.
 
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