Anonymous wrote:I mean, are you arguing that ineligible people on the voter rolls should not be removed? That is a strange position to take. You are in favor of people voting who shouldn't be?
Anonymous wrote:There are 20+ million illegal immigrants in this country. Many of which have government IDs and benefits. Why is any of this surprising?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, are you arguing that ineligible people on the voter rolls should not be removed? That is a strange position to take. You are in favor of people voting who shouldn't be?
Yes they are.
No one said that. Remove the dead people. Remove the duplicates. But removing people who haven’t voted in the last two federal elections (4 years) is burdensome. Many people only vote according to the presidential cycle and certainly can miss a cycle due to work or health issues.
Nearly 290,000—a plurality—of the latest removals were duplicate registrations for voters who had moved elsewhere in the state.
The other top reasons were for inactivity in the last two federal elections (246,311) and death (130,688).
The Tar Heel State currently has more than 7.7 million registered voters.
This should not be allowed. Just because a person chose not to vote in two federal elections, they should still be able to walk in for any election and vote. We should be encouraging citizens to vote and make it as easy as possible for legal citizens to vote. Making voters jump through hoops if they are an infrequent voter is truly an egregious denial of rights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, are you arguing that ineligible people on the voter rolls should not be removed? That is a strange position to take. You are in favor of people voting who shouldn't be?
Yes they are.
No one said that. Remove the dead people. Remove the duplicates. But removing people who haven’t voted in the last two federal elections (4 years) is burdensome. Many people only vote according to the presidential cycle and certainly can miss a cycle due to work or health issues.
Nearly 290,000—a plurality—of the latest removals were duplicate registrations for voters who had moved elsewhere in the state.
The other top reasons were for inactivity in the last two federal elections (246,311) and death (130,688).
The Tar Heel State currently has more than 7.7 million registered voters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, are you arguing that ineligible people on the voter rolls should not be removed? That is a strange position to take. You are in favor of people voting who shouldn't be?
Yes they are.
No one said that. Remove the dead people. Remove the duplicates. But removing people who haven’t voted in the last two federal elections (4 years) is burdensome. Many people only vote according to the presidential cycle and certainly can miss a cycle due to work or health issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, are you arguing that ineligible people on the voter rolls should not be removed? That is a strange position to take. You are in favor of people voting who shouldn't be?
Yes they are.
Anonymous wrote:I mean, are you arguing that ineligible people on the voter rolls should not be removed? That is a strange position to take. You are in favor of people voting who shouldn't be?
Anonymous wrote:I think this could actually work against Trump. It's not obvious to me that his supporters won't be the ones dropped. From what I've heard, his supporters are poor whites. Therefore more likely to rent?
Quote: "the majority of those stripped from the rolls were deemed ineligible to be registered because they had moved within the state and did not register their new address"