Denver Court Rules Secretary of State Can Replace Electors
8/22: The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver ruled that the Colorado secretary of state has the right to replace electors, which threatens the Electoral College.
8/22: The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver ruled that the Colorado secretary of state has the right to replace electors, which threatens the Electoral College.
8/22: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit ruled that Colorado's adoption of the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact violates the constitution.
8/22: Thirteen Edinburg residents were indicted for participating in an illegal voting conspiracy.
8/22: Tucson resident Randy Allen Jumper was charged with voting twice in the 2016 election.
8/21: North Carolina is considering a bill that would use jury exucusals to purge voter rolls, looking for noncitizens excused from jury duty who may be registered to vote.
8/21: Florida has joined the Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC), a 29-state compact designed to help states keep voter rolls clean.
8/21: After months of delays, Florida has decided to join the Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC), which will help keep the state's elections secure.
8/20: California lawmakers are working to pass a number of bills, all of which would grant released felons the right to vote before they completed their parole.
8/20: The Public Interest Legal Foundation reported that nearly 60% of counties in America have more registered voters than eligible voters on their rolls.
8/20: Though many on the left tried to impugn the president's claims that Google had manipulated votes, the facts are on the president's side.