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Reply to "Gov. Youngkin issues statement after DOJ files lawsuit over noncitizen voting in Va."
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Youngkin committed voter fraud. You can’t “clean the voter rolls” within 90 days of the election date. It’s a federal law. LOCK. HIM. UP.[/quote] Isn’t it also illegal to vote if you’re a non-citizen?[/quote] I often work remotely and am not checking my maildrop box more than once or twice a month. Other people go on two week cruises, or visit family in other states in advance of the holidays. It's illegal to remove you from voter rolls this close to an election. The citizens who were away from home or missed something in the mail but who were expecting federal law to be followed are not planning to vote illegally -- instead, you and the GOP are disenfranchising them illegally.[/quote] It's only illegal to remove eligible voters 90 days before. Non citizens were never eligible in the first place, therefore no law is being broken to remove them. [/quote] We are telling you what will actually happen: Glenn Youngkin’s illegal tampering with voters rolls within 90 days of the election WILL remove naturalized American citizens who received their license when they were still non-citizens (eg, on a Green Card or student visa or under a previous name prior to marriage). This is why Glenn Young is an un-American criminal. Please repeat this: “Glenn Youngkin is a criminal who broke federal election laws.”[/quote] Nope. - All the voter roll entries removed were of people who affirmatively attested that they were not US citizens, then when specifically given a second chance to correct that information if it were in error, declined to do so. - [b]The date of said affirmations was on or after the registration date in the voter rolls. [/b] - This means an ineligible person had been erroneously registered. - Erroneous registrations are not covered by the 90-day quiet period under NVRA. - The League of Women Voters and the DOJ are able to produce no citizens who were negatively impacted by the removal of these records. - Any removed person who has since become a citizen may register to vote in Virginia right now. - The removal of these records was not an arbitrary act, but the lawful execution of legislation signed in 2006 by then-Governor Tim Kaine. - The removals are a fait accompli; it is not a potential action that can be enjoined. The records are no longer in the voter rolls. - The remedy being demanded is restoration of confirmed, erroneous noncitizen entries on Virginia voter rolls. - Knowingly adding noncitizens to Virginia's voter rolls is a state felony.[/quote] Thanks for sharing the reality of the situation.[/quote] The false reality. It is not lawful unless you think Youngkin is exempt from federal law. He knows very well what he is doing is illegal, and he doesn't care.[/quote]
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