By John Paluska, Founder of The Washington Gazette
Michigan's Secretary of State has removed roughly 177,000 voter registrations due to these people forfeiting their drivers licenses in other states in addition to having "election mail sent to them and returned to an election official as undeliverable," Michigan's Secretary of State website reports.
According to Michigan's Secretary of State website:
In March 2021, the Michigan Bureau of Elections will cancel approximately 177,000 Michigan voter registrations as part of routine, post-election voter list maintenance. The registrations belong to people who appear to have moved, because before the November 2018 election they surrendered a Michigan driver’s license in another state or had election mail sent to them and returned to an election official as undeliverable. As required by federal law, these voters were sent a notice prior to the November 2018 election, did not respond to the notice, and have not voted or had other voting activity in at least the last two federal election cycles (2020 and 2018).
Cleaning up voter rolls can help prevent voter fraud because it removes name that can be used for people to impersonate voters and manipulate the vote. Iowa has begun a similar process of cleaning up the voter rolls by sending "activity notices" to voters in the state. The people who do not answer back will be removed from the voter rolls.
However, the voters being removed from the voter lists were all people who did not vote in the previous 2020 election, so it is unknown if any currently fraudulent voters will be removed from these lists if these states have any of them.
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2 Comments
And just how many of them voted in 2020?
ReplyDeleteTrouble reading, chief? "The voters being removed from the voter lists were all people who did not vote in the previous 2020 election."
Delete