Thanks to its analyses of voter rolls and numerous lawsuits, Judicial Watch can now report that, over the last several years, about five million names have been struck from voter rolls in almost a dozen states and localities.
These names unlawfully appeared on the rolls because of invalid voter registrations, as validity is defined in the National Voter Registration Act Of 1993.
According to the Act, each application to register “must state each voter eligibility requirement (including citizenship), contain an attestation that the applicant meets each requirement, state the penalties provided by law for submission of a false voter registration application and require the signature of the applicant under penalty of perjury.”
Thanks to Judicial Watch, 735,000 ineligible names have been removed from Kentucky voter rolls since 2019; 918,139 ineligible names have been removed from New York City voter rolls since 2022; and over a million ineligible names have been removed from the voter rolls of Los Angeles County.
These efforts have also led to the removal of ineligible names from the voter rolls of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Colorado, North Carolina, and outside of LA in California.
It hasn’t always been smooth sailing for the organization. In Maryland, for example, the State Board of Elections promulgated a rule to criminalize the use of registration lists to investigate voter fraud. A district court ruled that the rule violated the law.
Voter fraud is a problem, and it hasn’t been fixed yet. Thanks to Judicial Watch for making a big dent.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
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3 replies on “The Five Million Fix”
Any instances of unauthorized voting? Any prosecutions?
Indictments seem rare, but certainly occur. For example: https://www.ice.gov/news/releases/19-foreign-nationals-indicted-illegally-voting-2016-elections
We’ve had a history in this century of the losing tribe insisting that a Presidential election was rigged. Republicans did this in response to the election of 2020. Democrats did this in response to the elections of 2000, 2004, 2016, and 2024. Even were actual experts perfectly sure that no election were or could be stolen, the general public would need relief from this turmoil.
Meanwhile, officials, especially in jurisdiction controlled by Democrats, resist any attempt to reform the system and make it demonstrably secure.
300,000 ballot records from 2020 in Fulton County, Georgia, requested 4 1/2 years ago under the Georgia Public Records Act. Still have not been released. Fulton County sued to categorize them as “not public records that the Public Records Act applies to. Lost. Still not released.
Seems like a curious delay from election administrators.
Unless one considers that the penalty for flagrantly violating state law is in no danger of being levied by Georgia Attorney General Carr, who appears to be carrying water to help hide the records. Versus the penalties and notoriety that might be assumed were one to facilitate exposing records that could expose a stolen 2020 election.
Then it makes sense.