Michael Theilen at RNLA hits the nail on the head in the New York Times.
Monthly Archives: November 2014
Big Wins for Election Integrity Champs in Secretary of State Races
Champions of election integrity cleaned up in Secretary of State races. Among the winners:
Mark Martin in Arkansas, Kris Kobach in Kansas, Ruth Johnson in Michigan, Al Jaeger, Wayne Williams in Colorado and Brian Kemp in Georgia.
So much for that effort to demonize and oust election integrity advocates. Williams was a close political friend of Scott Gessler. As an election clerk, Williams fought with Gessler against the fraud-inviting Vote by Mail law.
Missouri Voters Reject Early Voting
Another example of the elite election reformers at odds with the voters. Missouri voters also reject early voting.
CT Voters Reject Early Voting
In a sign that voters like to vote on election day, voters have rejected an amendment to allow early voting in Connecticut. This outcome illustrates how a small groups of advocates for changing election process rules are often at odds with public sentiment. These politically connected advocates have fought for election “reforms” designed to aid one party while the reforms masquerade as efforts to make voting easier. Early voting is one such reform.
Does Cosmo Mag’s Swag Bus Violate Federal Election Law?
Cosmo magazine is sending a swag bus to college campuses in North Carolina to drum up the vote. Cosmo’s stated agenda is, not surprisingly “abortion and contraception.” As part of the GOTV effort, the Cosmo bus will be picking up college kids to vote and will be filled with “swag” and “snacks” according to the Washington Post.
But does the Cosmo Swag bus constitute a federal felony? 42 U.S.C. 1973i(c) prohibits giving anything of value for voting. United States v. Garcia, 719 F.2d 99, extended this even to food. To violate the criminal law, the offer must have been made to induce someone to vote. What sort of evidence exists relevant to whether Cosmo is breaking federal election law?
Let’s turn to the Cosmo webpage announcing the party bus. It states:
On Election Day, a bus decked out with snacks, swag, and models (hi, this is Cosmo) will roll up to North Carolina State University, the winner of Cosmopolitan.com’s first-ever party bus contest. The bus will shuttle students back and forth to a nearby polling location so students can vote. . . .
The contest is part of Cosmopolitan.com’s #CosmoVotes campaign, designed to get young people excited to vote in the midterm elections.
Let’s recap: Intent to induce? The Cosmo webpage lays out the intent of the campaign. Thing of value? Snacks. Swag. Models.
Of course such election laws are enforced by the US Attorney in Raleigh. Don’t hold your breath that examination of the activity will even occur. And Cosmo will be sure to say – “we aren’t offering anything of value to get people to go vote.” They better get the Cosmo webmaster busy editing.
O’Keefe Strikes Again: Exposes Vulnerabilities from Dirty Rolls
James O’Keefe shows how easy it is to vote without voter ID and when voter rolls are dirty, as they are across the country.
Noncitizen Voting Study Authors Debunk Academics
My Washington Examiner Piece: “Six Myths and Facts on Voter Fraud”
My Sunday editorial at the Washington Examiner is here:
“… 5. Myth: Mail-Voting is Fraud Free.
If you wanted to invite fraud, you’d do what Colorado has done: Go to an all vote-by-mail election.
Every single registered voter will be mailed a ballot, including those who haven’t voted in years. Colorado reclassified all inactive voters as active voters for the election. People who should have been removed from the rolls under federal law will now have a ballot mailed to an address where they no longer live. Harvesters will go door to door hoping to collect ballots. Some might be cast under coercion. Some will be cast by someone else.
And the Postal Service — the people who regularly bring you your neighbor’s mail — will now be handling the outcome.
Vote-by-mail is part of Democrats’ plan to keep Colorado blue. We’ll learn next week if it works.”