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That thing that never happens is happening again...

When you show up with your out of State driver's license, it won't be hard to tell that you might have moved out of State.

But the problem of voter roles you just linked will not be solved, yes or no?
 
Try to vote with an out state licensr

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That doesn't have anything to do with the old state purging the rolls after the person moved.

Fingerprints would take care of this issue.
 
As soon as it the laws are enforced, there will be ways to buy fake voter IDs online.
 
It's not about out of state license. 308,000 out of over 8M may have moved since they last registered to vote. This is a non-event.
 
The funny thing is fraudulent IDs are more prevalent than fraudulent voting.

Can't wait to tell all the 18-20 year olds with fake IDs that Republicans want to make it easier for them to vote twice.
 
Considering VA's significant military and government population...

"Reagan George, president of Virginia Voters Alliance, explained how this happens: “Say you move to Kansas and tell the election office there that you were registered in Virginia when you submit your Kansas voter-registration form. If the Kansas election official is bureaucratically lazy or politically motivated, your name never gets removed. The same thing can happen on the Virginia end, and you stay double-registered.”

How many of the 308,000 voters cast multiple ballots in a single election is not known."

"Don Palmer, secretary of the Virginia State Board of Elections, said efforts are being made to contact Virginia voters who have registered in other states.

Palmer said Virginia participates in two voter crosscheck programs and compares data with those of 30 other states, including Maryland, Delaware, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky and West Virginia.

“Attempts to contact the identified voters who have registered in other states after their last activity date in Virginia—including registering to vote and voting—at both their current Virginia registration address and their out-of-state registration address are currently under way in accordance with the National Voter Registration Act and Virginia law,” Palmer said."

"working with Election Integrity Maryland—says it found 164 individuals who voted in both states in 2012.
 
#neverhappens

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Yeah, try chasing down the report where that "164 individuals who voted in both states in 2012" comes from and get back to me with primary sourcing. There's a reason why it made the rounds via Lectrogram and not legitimate media sources -- and it's not the elections fraud conspiracy trying to maintain their federal funding.
 
Considering VA's significant military and government population...

"Reagan George, president of Virginia Voters Alliance, explained how this happens: “Say you move to Kansas and tell the election office there that you were registered in Virginia when you submit your Kansas voter-registration form. If the Kansas election official is bureaucratically lazy or politically motivated, your name never gets removed. The same thing can happen on the Virginia end, and you stay double-registered.”

How many of the 308,000 voters cast multiple ballots in a single election is not known."

"Don Palmer, secretary of the Virginia State Board of Elections, said efforts are being made to contact Virginia voters who have registered in other states.

Palmer said Virginia participates in two voter crosscheck programs and compares data with those of 30 other states, including Maryland, Delaware, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky and West Virginia.

“Attempts to contact the identified voters who have registered in other states after their last activity date in Virginia—including registering to vote and voting—at both their current Virginia registration address and their out-of-state registration address are currently under way in accordance with the National Voter Registration Act and Virginia law,” Palmer said."

"working with Election Integrity Maryland—says it found 164 individuals who voted in both states in 2012.

Voter ID laws would not stop this. If many of those people were in the military or had a driver's license, they could have voted in both places anyway.

This is an entirely different issue and nothing to do with these voter suppression laws.
 
It's entirely possible for someone to legally vote in two states in the same year.

If anything voter ID laws make this easier.

If you know you are moving you can simply write in for an extra copy of your DL and then turn in only one in the new state.

I wonder how many change their passports when they move.
 
It's entirely possible for someone to legally vote in two states in the same year.

Yep.

Heck, it's possible for someone to have a legal ID in two states on the same day if they are simply moving across state lines and get to the DMV soon enough.
 
it's possible that someone who lives near the border of 3 states to finagle it, but is that really a scenario we need to be concerned with? 10s of people scrambling to spend an entire day adding their votes to 3 separate elections?
 
Apparently, yes. We should make it harder for a lot of people to vote in order to account for a few people. And voter ID wouldn't stop a lot of the fraud jhmd and Hulka have posted.

#fingerprints
 
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