One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Main
Nearly 1 Million Californians Registered to V**e Are Ineligible, Says Non-Partisan Group
Jul 12, 2019 13:38:52   #
Parky60 Loc: People's Republic of Illinois
 
A non-partisan group has reported that there are still several counties in California where the number of registered v**ers is greater than the number of eligible citizens, with the total nearing one million people.

Nearly 1 Million Californians Registered to V**e Are Ineligible, Says Non-Partisan Group
Alice Salles ~ July 11, 2019
The E******n Integrity Project California (EIPCa) stated in a release on July 8 that if v**er problems are not promptly addressed by state officials, f********t e******n activities may continue to haunt the state.

Using the state’s own data on active and inactive status registrants, the organization found that eight counties have not cleaned up their inactive registrant lists, despite a 2018 legal settlement that requires California counties to properly maintain their v**er rolls and remove inactive v**ers according to federal law.

According to EIPCa, there are currently 991,411 people registered who are ineligible to v**e. This is a staggering increase of 928,035 persons over the group’s 2017 report.

As the number of names with inactive status continues to grow, the organization noted that these excess registrants open up the doors to fraud.

V***r r**********n rates that exceed the eligible population range from 103% in Ventura, San Benito, and Plumas counties to 115% in San Diego. Other counties include San Mateo at 104%, Solano and Santa Cruz at 107%, and Los Angeles at 109%.

Just months ago, the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) acknowledged making 105,000 registration errors, with at least one noncitizen claiming the DMV improperly added him to the v**er rolls.

In an interview with The Epoch Times, EIPCa Chief Analyst Ellen Swensen confirmed that the DMV’s practices still need improvement, although the EIPCa doesn’t have a way of finding out who is or isn’t a citizen by just looking at their v***r r**********ns.

In addition to the errors made by the DMV, she said, people who are ineligible to v**e might also be getting registration forms from people who are paid to register v**ers and who might be unaware of the law.

“This can harm [immigrants’] future chances of gaining citizenship, so it’s important that non-citizens become educated about this,” she said. Furthermore, there are “thousands of duplicated [and ineligible] registrations” that can be used during e******ns “with or without the person’s knowledge.”

Recently, nine people were accused of offering cash or cigarettes in exchange for forged signatures on v***r r**********n forms and petitions in Los Angeles. Prosecutors claim the group was active during the 2016 and 2018 e******n cycles, targeting the homeless to help them register fictitious persons.

EIPCa says this type of abuse may have been enabled by the state’s v****g laws.

“Because California does not require an ID for a person to v**e, and because some counties include the names of inactive registrants on their publicly-displayed E******n Day rosters, anyone can claim to be the inactive registrant and receive a b****t,” Swensen said.

“All that is required is an oath (verbal or signed) that they are who they say they are.”

Swensen said officials need to do more to fix this problem.

“EIPCa would like to see counties become more proactive with list maintenance by mailing a card to every registrant on the list, not just those with inactive status,” she explained.

“This would allow all registrants to update their information and would, for those who have moved, died, etc., begin the lawful [process of inactivation and cancellation]. This would go a long way to reduce the almost 1 million ineligibles currently on CA’s list.”

In early 2019, the Sacramento Bee reported that Secretary of State Alex Padilla’s office was investigating whether noncitizens had v**ed in the June 2018 primary. At the time, Padilla admitted that v**ers were losing their trust in the system due to registration errors, echoing others such as State Sen. John Moorlach (R-Costa Mesa), who said that despite his “high level of confidence in California’s e******n systems,” he knew that the state should “do more to assure the v**ers that the system doesn’t have holes in it and that the boat isn’t leaking.”

Meanwhile, in November 2018, San Francisco became the largest city in the United State to give noncitizens the chance to v**e in a local e******n. While the city’s move did not impact any e******n in the state or federal levels, some believe that the trend could spread to the rest of the state, and errors could continue to occur.

“Noncitizen v****g is a very contentious issue,” said Robin Hvidston, executive director of We the People Rising, a Claremont organization that lobbies for stricter immigration enforcement, at the time, according to the Los Angeles Times. “The move to extend v****g rights to those illegally residing in San Francisco has the potential to backfire among citizens with a moderate stance on i*****l i*********n.”

Reply
Jul 12, 2019 13:56:27   #
Trooper745 Loc: Carolina
 
Parky60 wrote:
A non-partisan group has reported that there are still several counties in California where the number of registered v**ers is greater than the number of eligible citizens, with the total nearing one million people.

Nearly 1 Million Californians Registered to V**e Are Ineligible, Says Non-Partisan Group
Alice Salles ~ July 11, 2019
The E******n Integrity Project California (EIPCa) stated in a release on July 8 that if v**er problems are not promptly addressed by state officials, f********t e******n activities may continue to haunt the state.

Using the state’s own data on active and inactive status registrants, the organization found that eight counties have not cleaned up their inactive registrant lists, despite a 2018 legal settlement that requires California counties to properly maintain their v**er rolls and remove inactive v**ers according to federal law.

According to EIPCa, there are currently 991,411 people registered who are ineligible to v**e. This is a staggering increase of 928,035 persons over the group’s 2017 report.

As the number of names with inactive status continues to grow, the organization noted that these excess registrants open up the doors to fraud.

V***r r**********n rates that exceed the eligible population range from 103% in Ventura, San Benito, and Plumas counties to 115% in San Diego. Other counties include San Mateo at 104%, Solano and Santa Cruz at 107%, and Los Angeles at 109%.

Just months ago, the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) acknowledged making 105,000 registration errors, with at least one noncitizen claiming the DMV improperly added him to the v**er rolls.

In an interview with The Epoch Times, EIPCa Chief Analyst Ellen Swensen confirmed that the DMV’s practices still need improvement, although the EIPCa doesn’t have a way of finding out who is or isn’t a citizen by just looking at their v***r r**********ns.

In addition to the errors made by the DMV, she said, people who are ineligible to v**e might also be getting registration forms from people who are paid to register v**ers and who might be unaware of the law.

“This can harm [immigrants’] future chances of gaining citizenship, so it’s important that non-citizens become educated about this,” she said. Furthermore, there are “thousands of duplicated [and ineligible] registrations” that can be used during e******ns “with or without the person’s knowledge.”

Recently, nine people were accused of offering cash or cigarettes in exchange for forged signatures on v***r r**********n forms and petitions in Los Angeles. Prosecutors claim the group was active during the 2016 and 2018 e******n cycles, targeting the homeless to help them register fictitious persons.

EIPCa says this type of abuse may have been enabled by the state’s v****g laws.

“Because California does not require an ID for a person to v**e, and because some counties include the names of inactive registrants on their publicly-displayed E******n Day rosters, anyone can claim to be the inactive registrant and receive a b****t,” Swensen said.

“All that is required is an oath (verbal or signed) that they are who they say they are.”

Swensen said officials need to do more to fix this problem.

“EIPCa would like to see counties become more proactive with list maintenance by mailing a card to every registrant on the list, not just those with inactive status,” she explained.

“This would allow all registrants to update their information and would, for those who have moved, died, etc., begin the lawful [process of inactivation and cancellation]. This would go a long way to reduce the almost 1 million ineligibles currently on CA’s list.”

In early 2019, the Sacramento Bee reported that Secretary of State Alex Padilla’s office was investigating whether noncitizens had v**ed in the June 2018 primary. At the time, Padilla admitted that v**ers were losing their trust in the system due to registration errors, echoing others such as State Sen. John Moorlach (R-Costa Mesa), who said that despite his “high level of confidence in California’s e******n systems,” he knew that the state should “do more to assure the v**ers that the system doesn’t have holes in it and that the boat isn’t leaking.”

Meanwhile, in November 2018, San Francisco became the largest city in the United State to give noncitizens the chance to v**e in a local e******n. While the city’s move did not impact any e******n in the state or federal levels, some believe that the trend could spread to the rest of the state, and errors could continue to occur.

“Noncitizen v****g is a very contentious issue,” said Robin Hvidston, executive director of We the People Rising, a Claremont organization that lobbies for stricter immigration enforcement, at the time, according to the Los Angeles Times. “The move to extend v****g rights to those illegally residing in San Francisco has the potential to backfire among citizens with a moderate stance on i*****l i*********n.”
i A non-partisan group has reported that there ar... (show quote)


That is the reason the socialist democrats want the e*******l college abolished. If the tens of millions of i*****l a***ns in this country v**e illegally, any crappy candidate could be elected. That's all the socialist democrats have, the crappy dregs of the political field.

Reply
Jul 12, 2019 14:20:21   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
Trooper745 wrote:
That is the reason the socialist democrats want the e*******l college abolished. If the tens of millions of i*****l a***ns in this country v**e illegally, any crappy candidate could be elected. That's all the socialist democrats have, the crappy dregs of the political field.


Crappy dregs of humanity, if you don't mind me saying.

Reply
 
 
Jul 12, 2019 18:25:20   #
Carol Kelly
 
Parky60 wrote:
A non-partisan group has reported that there are still several counties in California where the number of registered v**ers is greater than the number of eligible citizens, with the total nearing one million people.

Nearly 1 Million Californians Registered to V**e Are Ineligible, Says Non-Partisan Group
Alice Salles ~ July 11, 2019
The E******n Integrity Project California (EIPCa) stated in a release on July 8 that if v**er problems are not promptly addressed by state officials, f********t e******n activities may continue to haunt the state.

Using the state’s own data on active and inactive status registrants, the organization found that eight counties have not cleaned up their inactive registrant lists, despite a 2018 legal settlement that requires California counties to properly maintain their v**er rolls and remove inactive v**ers according to federal law.

According to EIPCa, there are currently 991,411 people registered who are ineligible to v**e. This is a staggering increase of 928,035 persons over the group’s 2017 report.

As the number of names with inactive status continues to grow, the organization noted that these excess registrants open up the doors to fraud.

V***r r**********n rates that exceed the eligible population range from 103% in Ventura, San Benito, and Plumas counties to 115% in San Diego. Other counties include San Mateo at 104%, Solano and Santa Cruz at 107%, and Los Angeles at 109%.

Just months ago, the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) acknowledged making 105,000 registration errors, with at least one noncitizen claiming the DMV improperly added him to the v**er rolls.

In an interview with The Epoch Times, EIPCa Chief Analyst Ellen Swensen confirmed that the DMV’s practices still need improvement, although the EIPCa doesn’t have a way of finding out who is or isn’t a citizen by just looking at their v***r r**********ns.

In addition to the errors made by the DMV, she said, people who are ineligible to v**e might also be getting registration forms from people who are paid to register v**ers and who might be unaware of the law.

“This can harm [immigrants’] future chances of gaining citizenship, so it’s important that non-citizens become educated about this,” she said. Furthermore, there are “thousands of duplicated [and ineligible] registrations” that can be used during e******ns “with or without the person’s knowledge.”

Recently, nine people were accused of offering cash or cigarettes in exchange for forged signatures on v***r r**********n forms and petitions in Los Angeles. Prosecutors claim the group was active during the 2016 and 2018 e******n cycles, targeting the homeless to help them register fictitious persons.

EIPCa says this type of abuse may have been enabled by the state’s v****g laws.

“Because California does not require an ID for a person to v**e, and because some counties include the names of inactive registrants on their publicly-displayed E******n Day rosters, anyone can claim to be the inactive registrant and receive a b****t,” Swensen said.

“All that is required is an oath (verbal or signed) that they are who they say they are.”

Swensen said officials need to do more to fix this problem.

“EIPCa would like to see counties become more proactive with list maintenance by mailing a card to every registrant on the list, not just those with inactive status,” she explained.

“This would allow all registrants to update their information and would, for those who have moved, died, etc., begin the lawful [process of inactivation and cancellation]. This would go a long way to reduce the almost 1 million ineligibles currently on CA’s list.”

In early 2019, the Sacramento Bee reported that Secretary of State Alex Padilla’s office was investigating whether noncitizens had v**ed in the June 2018 primary. At the time, Padilla admitted that v**ers were losing their trust in the system due to registration errors, echoing others such as State Sen. John Moorlach (R-Costa Mesa), who said that despite his “high level of confidence in California’s e******n systems,” he knew that the state should “do more to assure the v**ers that the system doesn’t have holes in it and that the boat isn’t leaking.”

Meanwhile, in November 2018, San Francisco became the largest city in the United State to give noncitizens the chance to v**e in a local e******n. While the city’s move did not impact any e******n in the state or federal levels, some believe that the trend could spread to the rest of the state, and errors could continue to occur.

“Noncitizen v****g is a very contentious issue,” said Robin Hvidston, executive director of We the People Rising, a Claremont organization that lobbies for stricter immigration enforcement, at the time, according to the Los Angeles Times. “The move to extend v****g rights to those illegally residing in San Francisco has the potential to backfire among citizens with a moderate stance on i*****l i*********n.”
i A non-partisan group has reported that there ar... (show quote)


That’s something that the Constitution does cover. One citizens one v**e!

Reply
Jul 12, 2019 19:05:07   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
Carol Kelly wrote:
That’s something that the Constitution does cover. One citizens one v**e!


Not if your a Democrat.

Reply
Jul 12, 2019 19:36:17   #
Trooper745 Loc: Carolina
 
Carol Kelly wrote:
That’s something that the Constitution does cover. One citizens one v**e!


And, ... dead or alive ...

Reply
Jul 13, 2019 07:16:55   #
PeterS
 
Parky60 wrote:
A non-partisan group has reported that there are still several counties in California where the number of registered v**ers is greater than the number of eligible citizens, with the total nearing one million people.

Nearly 1 Million Californians Registered to V**e Are Ineligible, Says Non-Partisan Group
Alice Salles ~ July 11, 2019
The E******n Integrity Project California (EIPCa) stated in a release on July 8 that if v**er problems are not promptly addressed by state officials, f********t e******n activities may continue to haunt the state.

Using the state’s own data on active and inactive status registrants, the organization found that eight counties have not cleaned up their inactive registrant lists, despite a 2018 legal settlement that requires California counties to properly maintain their v**er rolls and remove inactive v**ers according to federal law.

According to EIPCa, there are currently 991,411 people registered who are ineligible to v**e. This is a staggering increase of 928,035 persons over the group’s 2017 report.

As the number of names with inactive status continues to grow, the organization noted that these excess registrants open up the doors to fraud.

V***r r**********n rates that exceed the eligible population range from 103% in Ventura, San Benito, and Plumas counties to 115% in San Diego. Other counties include San Mateo at 104%, Solano and Santa Cruz at 107%, and Los Angeles at 109%.

Just months ago, the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) acknowledged making 105,000 registration errors, with at least one noncitizen claiming the DMV improperly added him to the v**er rolls.

In an interview with The Epoch Times, EIPCa Chief Analyst Ellen Swensen confirmed that the DMV’s practices still need improvement, although the EIPCa doesn’t have a way of finding out who is or isn’t a citizen by just looking at their v***r r**********ns.

In addition to the errors made by the DMV, she said, people who are ineligible to v**e might also be getting registration forms from people who are paid to register v**ers and who might be unaware of the law.

“This can harm [immigrants’] future chances of gaining citizenship, so it’s important that non-citizens become educated about this,” she said. Furthermore, there are “thousands of duplicated [and ineligible] registrations” that can be used during e******ns “with or without the person’s knowledge.”

Recently, nine people were accused of offering cash or cigarettes in exchange for forged signatures on v***r r**********n forms and petitions in Los Angeles. Prosecutors claim the group was active during the 2016 and 2018 e******n cycles, targeting the homeless to help them register fictitious persons.

EIPCa says this type of abuse may have been enabled by the state’s v****g laws.

“Because California does not require an ID for a person to v**e, and because some counties include the names of inactive registrants on their publicly-displayed E******n Day rosters, anyone can claim to be the inactive registrant and receive a b****t,” Swensen said.

“All that is required is an oath (verbal or signed) that they are who they say they are.”

Swensen said officials need to do more to fix this problem.

“EIPCa would like to see counties become more proactive with list maintenance by mailing a card to every registrant on the list, not just those with inactive status,” she explained.

“This would allow all registrants to update their information and would, for those who have moved, died, etc., begin the lawful [process of inactivation and cancellation]. This would go a long way to reduce the almost 1 million ineligibles currently on CA’s list.”

In early 2019, the Sacramento Bee reported that Secretary of State Alex Padilla’s office was investigating whether noncitizens had v**ed in the June 2018 primary. At the time, Padilla admitted that v**ers were losing their trust in the system due to registration errors, echoing others such as State Sen. John Moorlach (R-Costa Mesa), who said that despite his “high level of confidence in California’s e******n systems,” he knew that the state should “do more to assure the v**ers that the system doesn’t have holes in it and that the boat isn’t leaking.”

Meanwhile, in November 2018, San Francisco became the largest city in the United State to give noncitizens the chance to v**e in a local e******n. While the city’s move did not impact any e******n in the state or federal levels, some believe that the trend could spread to the rest of the state, and errors could continue to occur.

“Noncitizen v****g is a very contentious issue,” said Robin Hvidston, executive director of We the People Rising, a Claremont organization that lobbies for stricter immigration enforcement, at the time, according to the Los Angeles Times. “The move to extend v****g rights to those illegally residing in San Francisco has the potential to backfire among citizens with a moderate stance on i*****l i*********n.”
i A non-partisan group has reported that there ar... (show quote)

Inactive v**ers are individuals who have moved from the state or have died. Every state has inactive v**ers--how are you tying them into intentional fraud?

BTW California is purging 5 million inactive v**ers from their files. Will this make you happy?

Reply
 
 
Jul 13, 2019 13:44:36   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
PeterS wrote:
Inactive v**ers are individuals who have moved from the state or have died. Every state has inactive v**ers--how are you tying them into intentional fraud?

BTW California is purging 5 million inactive v**ers from their files. Will this make you happy?


Because we are FORCING them. They were sued by Judicial Watch.

It's a start...but Chicago, New York and a bunch of other places under DEMOCRAT control will be next AND we will see v**er ID because Democrats can't hold power in those places if they can't C***T.

Reply
Jul 13, 2019 14:30:59   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
Parky60 wrote:
A non-partisan group has reported that there are still several counties in California where the number of registered v**ers is greater than the number of eligible citizens, with the total nearing one million people.

Nearly 1 Million Californians Registered to V**e Are Ineligible, Says Non-Partisan Group
Alice Salles ~ July 11, 2019
The E******n Integrity Project California (EIPCa) stated in a release on July 8 that if v**er problems are not promptly addressed by state officials, f********t e******n activities may continue to haunt the state.

Using the state’s own data on active and inactive status registrants, the organization found that eight counties have not cleaned up their inactive registrant lists, despite a 2018 legal settlement that requires California counties to properly maintain their v**er rolls and remove inactive v**ers according to federal law.

According to EIPCa, there are currently 991,411 people registered who are ineligible to v**e. This is a staggering increase of 928,035 persons over the group’s 2017 report.

As the number of names with inactive status continues to grow, the organization noted that these excess registrants open up the doors to fraud.

V***r r**********n rates that exceed the eligible population range from 103% in Ventura, San Benito, and Plumas counties to 115% in San Diego. Other counties include San Mateo at 104%, Solano and Santa Cruz at 107%, and Los Angeles at 109%.

Just months ago, the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) acknowledged making 105,000 registration errors, with at least one noncitizen claiming the DMV improperly added him to the v**er rolls.

In an interview with The Epoch Times, EIPCa Chief Analyst Ellen Swensen confirmed that the DMV’s practices still need improvement, although the EIPCa doesn’t have a way of finding out who is or isn’t a citizen by just looking at their v***r r**********ns.

In addition to the errors made by the DMV, she said, people who are ineligible to v**e might also be getting registration forms from people who are paid to register v**ers and who might be unaware of the law.

“This can harm [immigrants’] future chances of gaining citizenship, so it’s important that non-citizens become educated about this,” she said. Furthermore, there are “thousands of duplicated [and ineligible] registrations” that can be used during e******ns “with or without the person’s knowledge.”

Recently, nine people were accused of offering cash or cigarettes in exchange for forged signatures on v***r r**********n forms and petitions in Los Angeles. Prosecutors claim the group was active during the 2016 and 2018 e******n cycles, targeting the homeless to help them register fictitious persons.

EIPCa says this type of abuse may have been enabled by the state’s v****g laws.

“Because California does not require an ID for a person to v**e, and because some counties include the names of inactive registrants on their publicly-displayed E******n Day rosters, anyone can claim to be the inactive registrant and receive a b****t,” Swensen said.

“All that is required is an oath (verbal or signed) that they are who they say they are.”

Swensen said officials need to do more to fix this problem.

“EIPCa would like to see counties become more proactive with list maintenance by mailing a card to every registrant on the list, not just those with inactive status,” she explained.

“This would allow all registrants to update their information and would, for those who have moved, died, etc., begin the lawful [process of inactivation and cancellation]. This would go a long way to reduce the almost 1 million ineligibles currently on CA’s list.”

In early 2019, the Sacramento Bee reported that Secretary of State Alex Padilla’s office was investigating whether noncitizens had v**ed in the June 2018 primary. At the time, Padilla admitted that v**ers were losing their trust in the system due to registration errors, echoing others such as State Sen. John Moorlach (R-Costa Mesa), who said that despite his “high level of confidence in California’s e******n systems,” he knew that the state should “do more to assure the v**ers that the system doesn’t have holes in it and that the boat isn’t leaking.”

Meanwhile, in November 2018, San Francisco became the largest city in the United State to give noncitizens the chance to v**e in a local e******n. While the city’s move did not impact any e******n in the state or federal levels, some believe that the trend could spread to the rest of the state, and errors could continue to occur.

“Noncitizen v****g is a very contentious issue,” said Robin Hvidston, executive director of We the People Rising, a Claremont organization that lobbies for stricter immigration enforcement, at the time, according to the Los Angeles Times. “The move to extend v****g rights to those illegally residing in San Francisco has the potential to backfire among citizens with a moderate stance on i*****l i*********n.”
i A non-partisan group has reported that there ar... (show quote)


Anyone can v**e twice in cally! Mail out b****ts go to almost everyone and they v**e and conveniently cannot surrender the b****t! Then they v**e provisionally! Who checks? No one! Democrat in charge!!!!!

Reply
Jul 13, 2019 14:35:15   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
At the poll training in cally the supervisor, usually a county worker, said people v**ed for no v**er ID! It was a lie Gerry moonbeam passed a bill that said no I’d required! They set us up and they bold face lie about it! The v**ers never v**ed on this! Just like sanctuary cities! It’s c****e cally!!

Reply
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
Main
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.