Europeans Sending Ten Times the Number of Election Observers to U.S.
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe aims to [...]
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe aims to [...]
The U.S. Supreme Court has pheld Ohio’s election reform law, but liberal courts have struck down voter photo ID laws in other states such as North Carolina and North Dakota and watered down photo ID laws in Texas and Wisconsin. Federal judges also have vacated statutes in Alabama, Georgia and Kansas that permitted states to require proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote. The media and prominent Democrats cannot hide their delight.
As the election nears, you can bet voter identification requirements will increasingly be a major topic of conversation.
The secretary conceded in a recent telephone conference call with state officials that there is no credible threat of a successful cyberattack on the voting and ballot-counting process, despite revelations about recent attacks on the voter-registration systems in Arizona and Illinois.
Hans von Spakovsky dispels the myth that voter fraud does not exist by highlighting Virginia examples of voter fraud by noncitizens and actions by state and local election officials not to prosecute violators or follow state and federal laws.
Election integrity foes mistakenly tell us voter fraud is a myth. So when legitimate voter fraud is actually discovered, these foes pretend it didn’t happen, fail to take any steps to investigate or prosecute such cases, or, even worse, try to cover it up.
If photo ID laws are the bane to minority voting rights that leftists and assorted federal judges claim, you’d expect the public to agree. Not even close.
We have the most decentralized election system of any Western democracy.
Philadelphia has a long reputation of fixing elections as a means of controlling patronage and municipal contracts.
BISMARCK, N.D. -- A federal judge on Monday (Aug. 1) [...]