According to Fred Lucas at The Daily Signal, Judicial Watch recently announced, “About 5 million ineligible names were removed from voter registration rolls across the United States since 2019.” The report added, “almost 1 million of those coming from New York City.” Judicial Watch is a “conservative-leaning government watchdog group” seeking to clean up voter rolls. Lucas reported the following information.
[Judicial Watch] has taken legal action against state and local governments for voter list
maintenance under the 1993 National Voter Registration Act, which includes a
requirement that election officials clear voter lists of the names of dead
people, as well as the names of people that moved to another jurisdiction.
“Judicial
Watch’s clean-up of over five million dirty names from voter rolls is a
historic achievement for clean elections,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton
said in a public statement. “I have no doubt that Judicial Watch’s election
integrity heavy lifting helped stop the steal in 2024. But there are millions
of more names to be removed from voting rolls, which is why we are in federal
court in three states.”
New
York City, as part of a 2022 settlement with Judicial Watch, removed 918,139
ineligible names from its voter rolls. In February, the city announced 477,056
names were removed since March 2023. Previously, the city announced removing
441,083, according to Judicial Watch.
In
a March court filing, the Kentucky Board of Elections reported on its progress
since the 2018 consent decree with Judicial Watch.
“Consistent
with the NVRA’s purposes ‘to protect the integrity of the electoral process’
and ‘to ensure that accurate and current voter registration rolls are
maintained,’ the State Board of Elections has, since 2019, removed roughly
735,000 ineligible voter registrations from the voter rolls,” the Kentucky
court filing from March 28 says….
Lucas
noted that he has published a book titled “The Myth of Voter Suppression,”
which “details fraud cases in misusing the names of deceased or otherwise
ineligible voters whose names remain on the voters lists.”
This
included convictions in Texas, Washington state, and Kansas of politicians and
operatives related to false voter registration. It also details a 2013 sting
operation by the New York City Department of Investigation in which
investigators went to the polls signing in with the names of dead people,
convicted felons no longer eligible to vote, or people who had moved out of the
city, with no pushback from election workers.
The
more recent numbers provided by New York City and Kentucky come on top of
reporting from Los Angeles County in May 2022, confirming it removed 1.2
million ineligible names from its rolls as part of a settlement from a 2017
Judicial Watch lawsuit.
In
addition, the states of Pennsylvania, Colorado, North Carolina, and Ohio have
also removed ineligible names from the rolls because of legal pressure,
according to Judicial Watch.
The
question concerns the fact that so many ineligible names are even on the voter
rolls. How many million other ineligible names are on voter rolls, and how many
dead people and felons are voting in elections? All Americans should be
thanking Judicial Watch for forcing the removal of five million ineligible
names and supporting them in removing the rest. I have been a financial
supporter of Judicial Watch for numerous years and encourage my readers to
support them.
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