Tranquility
Well-Known Member
As if things couldn't get more bizarre.
Yesterday, we had Trump asking for Hillary to be drug tested and now, we have this:
To be fair, my wife died over a decade ago. I still get a mail-in ballot for her. After getting the first one so long ago, I went to a friend who was the second highest election officer in my (fairly large) city and she didn't know how to handle it so she called her friend at the county--the group in charge of the roles. What could I do?
Nothing.
Not a thing. I cannot stop my dead wife from being on the rolls. Only the voter can remove themselves. And, removal by a process described by law. If the state party of the incumbent secretary of state is helped by diligence or by dawdling on the purging of the rolls, what's our guess on how they will act?
https://www.justice.gov/crt/national-voter-registration-act-1993-nvra
31. What is “removal at the request of the registrant” under Section 8?
A "removal at the request of the registrant" under the NVRA involves first-hand information from a registrant that can originate in at least three ways: 1) an unsolicited direct request from the registrant to remove his or her name from the voting registration list, 2) a registrant completing and returning a confirmation card indicating an address change outside the jurisdiction, or 3) a registrant submitting a new application registering to vote a second time in a new jurisdiction, and providing information regarding the registrant’s prior voter registration address on the new application, which the State can treat as a request to cancel or transfer his or her prior registration. A registrant advising of a new address within the same jurisdiction, or registering to vote a second time at a new address within the same jurisdiction, should trigger an updating of the original registration, rather than its cancellation.
32. Are there any required procedures in the NVRA concerning removal of a person’s name from the voter registration rolls for mental incapacity, criminal conviction or death?
The NVRA does not require any particular process for removing persons who have been disqualified from voting pursuant to State law based upon a criminal conviction or an adjudication of mental incapacity. Moreover, while the NVRA requires States to make reasonable efforts to remove persons who have died, it does not require any particular process for doing so. States can follow whatever State law process exists for doing this. Section 303(a) of HAVA adds an additional requirement for NVRA covered States to coordinate the statewide voter registration database with State records on felony status and death. HAVA provides that list maintenance on the statewide database shall be done on a regular basis in accordance with the requirements of the NVRA.
Yea, but she IS forgetful.Oh, and yeah, the constitution. She has read it and knows what it demands.
She's signed that she received briefings to receive classified information yet told the FBI she did not recall. Are you sure she recalls what the Constitution demands? It seems a lot of people who have spent their lives in Washington begin to have only the fuzziest recollection.
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