How many more elections will the Democrats be allowed to steal?

Article author: 
Megan Barth
Article publisher: 
Canada Free Press
Article date: 
9 November 2017
Article category: 
National News
Medium
Article Body: 

Last week, the Nevada Secretary of State, Republican Barbara Cegavsky, announced that she had cleaned the state voting rolls as “routine maintenance” for the month of October. This routine maintenance removed 36,090 actively registered voters from the voting rolls and of this total, 17,616 were actively registered Democrats voters.  These may not seem like large numbers, however, the state of Nevada is not a densely populated state and only two counties in the state drive our representation: Clark County (Las Vegas) and Washoe County (Carson City) where many districts can be decided by a handful of votes.  President Donald Trump only lost Nevada by 27,000 votes and many of our incumbent Republican legislators lost by less than 1,000 votes.

The National Voting Rights Act (NVRA)  requires states to complete any systematic programs to remove ineligible voters not later than 90 days before any federal election. Additionally, Nevada is a founding member of the Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC), a nonprofit organization assisting states to improve the accuracy of their voter rolls.  Every 60 days, Nevada’s voter registration records and DMV records are uploaded to ERIC and compared against data supplied by the other 20 participating ERIC states (including Washington, D.C.), the Social Security Death Index, and the U.S. Postal Service’s National Change of Address database in an effort to identify deceased individuals and those registered to vote in more than one state.  Any potential duplications or deceased voters are reported to the Secretary of State’s office and local election officials for further investigation and processing, and as appropriate, removal from or correction of the voter roll.

Which begs many questions:  how many of these ineligible Nevada voters were on the rolls and able to vote in the 2016 election? How many of these voters did, if any, vote in the 2016 election? Of these ineligible voters, how many of them were not US citizens?  Was the Secretary of State able to access immigration data, provided by the Department of Homeland Security, for this routine maintenance?...

 

 


 

CAIRCO Research

Stolen elections? Voter fraud is nothing new