Yep. OP is obviously a troll - and a bad one. |
You must be a resident of Virginia to vote in Virginia and show a Virginia Driver's license or other ID from the state. Report her. |
I sincerely doubt that has happened in the last five years. |
That is completely false. - a guy who voted at GWMS, post run, in gym shorts and a tanktop. No wallet, no keys, no phone. |
That's interesting because I've always been asked to show ID. Unrelated, but I was turned away years ago after showing ID. The poll worker said that my record had been purged from the system because I didn't vote in a long time. |
You’ll be asked to show ID, but if you say you don’t have one, you’re supposed to be offered the option to sign an affirmation and still vote. The purge was bad. They purged me because my birthday was incorrectly listed as 1903 instead of 1993. |
Do not do that to her - you will hurt her daughters. I would never do that to anyone. |
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I once had a long time more or less casual classmate friend who admitted to me and a few others only at the 25th reunion that she had her son being heavily recruited from this high powered HS near Columbia SC, the name of which I forget, using property her in-laws owned there for “home residence” and enrollment. But they lived in a different school district.
I do not know how many people she felt safe telling this story to at the time, but there were like 5 or 6 of us at the table, and I know I was not the only one who was like, ‘that’s tax fraud’ in my head Anyway, apparently that same summer he was removed from his fancy New Trier quality (I guess) HS and his teams, lost his recruitment status, and finished out his HS degree in his actual public school system. So that’s what can happen to your kid. |
You don’t have to have a Virginia ID to vote — just a valid ID. My son is a Virginia resident, but has a DL from the state where he attends college because he drives the campus bus there, but he is a VA resident. |
| Snitches get stitches. Just mind your own business. |
There are lots of different IDs you can use, because the ID proves you are the person you're claiming to be - it is not used to prove where you live or are allowed to vote. The thing that proves you are allowed to vote is your registration, which requires you to give a VA address and is routinely checked against other sources like DMV records, death records, and the voter records of other states including MD. So for OP's coworker to allegedly vote in VA while living in MD, she'd have to not just lie on her voter registration but also on a lot of other documents that are used to check the registration status, including her drivers license and car registration, and also she has to not vote in MD elections. |
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So the coworker's car doesn't have license plates either. ..presumably isnt registered, passed safety inspection in years, and hasn't passed emissions testing (required only for northern VA counties; cant speak for MD).
Any more holes to your story? |
Then if she's registered as a Dem the Trump administration can also indict her for mortgage fraud!!! |
I think the universe of voters who don't have ID because their wallet was stolen, they were in a collision and their wallet got thrown out the window and is in a ditch underwater, their house burned down, they had to replace a lost ID in a state where those are sent by mail (mine does them on the spot, but I also live in a city which has the DOT office instead of 80 miles out in the country), etc etc is larger than the universe of fraudulent voters. In Oregon 5.6% of drivers licenses are replaced each year due to being physically lost or stolen. If you apply that loss rate to the number of registered voters, that's 526 on any given day. Replacements are sent by mail. IF they have online access or live in a town where they can go to DOT, they can get a receipt for the replacement, but the temporary documents also do not have a photo. |
| ^^ I used Oregon because I was able to find the statistic for Oregon. |