Why do FVAP Officials ridicule Kris Kobach?

Election Law Center has learned that certain top officials at FVAP with hyper-partisan backgrounds routinely mock Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach at official events and duringg routine work hours, even to other state election officials.  Maybe a little less mockery and a little more attention to detailg might have prevented telling Wisconsin UOCAVA voters they could mail in ballots by November 16.  Hopefully someone has received a letter of deficiency for this collossal mistake. 

Why do FVAP Officials ridicule Kris Kobach?

Election Law Center has learned that certain top officials at FVAP with hyper-partisan backgrounds routinely mock Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach at official events and duringg routine work hours, even to other state election officials.  Maybe a little less mockery and a little more attention to detailg might have prevented telling Wisconsin UOCAVA voters they could mail in ballots by November 16.  Hopefully someone has received a letter of deficiency for this collossal mistake. 

“Conservative Veterans of Voting Wars Cite Ballot Integrity to Justify Fight”

Roll Call profiles.

“Call them the voter fraud brain trust. A cadre of influential Washington, D.C., election lawyers has mobilized a sophisticated anti-fraud campaign built around lawsuits, white papers, Congressional testimony, speeches and even best-selling books. . . .

Less well-known than Indiana election lawyer James Bopp Jr., who’s made a national name for himself challenging the political money laws, conservative veterans of voting wars such as Hans von Spakovsky and J. Christian Adams nonetheless play a role similar to Bopp’s in their behind-the-scenes fight to protect ballot integrity.


Both former Justice Department officials, von Spakovsky and Adams have worked alongside such anti-fraud activists as Thomas Fitton, president of Judicial Watch, and Catherine Engelbrecht, president of the tea party group True the Vote.”

“Conservative Veterans of Voting Wars Cite Ballot Integrity to Justify Fight”

Roll Call profiles.

“Call them the voter fraud brain trust. A cadre of influential Washington, D.C., election lawyers has mobilized a sophisticated anti-fraud campaign built around lawsuits, white papers, Congressional testimony, speeches and even best-selling books. . . .

Less well-known than Indiana election lawyer James Bopp Jr., who’s made a national name for himself challenging the political money laws, conservative veterans of voting wars such as Hans von Spakovsky and J. Christian Adams nonetheless play a role similar to Bopp’s in their behind-the-scenes fight to protect ballot integrity.


Both former Justice Department officials, von Spakovsky and Adams have worked alongside such anti-fraud activists as Thomas Fitton, president of Judicial Watch, and Catherine Engelbrecht, president of the tea party group True the Vote.”

“The New York Times and New Black Panthers Protect Election Lawbreakers”

Latest at Front Page Mag.  (With a hat tip to the guy who turned me onto Walter Duranty.  You know who you are.)

“Once upon a time in America, if a group of citizen volunteers set out to help election officials detect problems with the voter rolls, they would have been praised. If a group of citizen volunteers had detected scores of dead people on the voter rolls they would have received broad accolades from all corners of America.

Once upon a time in America, we esteemed law abiding citizens who helped law enforcement detect law breakers – especially when it comes to the sanctity of elections.


But this isn’t the America we used to know. Instead, when election integrity groups like Houston-based True the Vote help detect countless problems with American elections – including people who illegally voted twice in the 2008 Presidential election from different states – they are slandered and attacked by the New York Times, academia and formerly relevant civil rights organizations.


When the Pew Charitable Trust reports that there are 2,000,000 ineligible voters on the rolls, nothing happens. But when volunteers seek to find and remove them, they are attacked as racists.


Something has indeed changed.


The 2012 election will have something never before seen in American elections – ordinary citizens in every corner of the country analyzing the voter rolls to see if dead and ineligible voters remain registered. On election day, volunteers will fan out across thousands of American polling places armed with pen and paper and record what happened.


For exercising this noble civic undertaking, the headlines of the New York Times scream “Voter Harassment Circa 2012.” The Times tells us “a Tea Party group, True the Vote, descends on a largely minority precinct and combs the registration records . . . nonexistent [voter fraud] is used as an excuse to reduce the political rights of minorities, the poor, students, older Americans and other groups that tend to vote Democratic.”


This is an outright lie. “

“The New York Times and New Black Panthers Protect Election Lawbreakers”

Latest at Front Page Mag.  (With a hat tip to the guy who turned me onto Walter Duranty.  You know who you are.)

“Once upon a time in America, if a group of citizen volunteers set out to help election officials detect problems with the voter rolls, they would have been praised. If a group of citizen volunteers had detected scores of dead people on the voter rolls they would have received broad accolades from all corners of America.

Once upon a time in America, we esteemed law abiding citizens who helped law enforcement detect law breakers – especially when it comes to the sanctity of elections.


But this isn’t the America we used to know. Instead, when election integrity groups like Houston-based True the Vote help detect countless problems with American elections – including people who illegally voted twice in the 2008 Presidential election from different states – they are slandered and attacked by the New York Times, academia and formerly relevant civil rights organizations.


When the Pew Charitable Trust reports that there are 2,000,000 ineligible voters on the rolls, nothing happens. But when volunteers seek to find and remove them, they are attacked as racists.


Something has indeed changed.


The 2012 election will have something never before seen in American elections – ordinary citizens in every corner of the country analyzing the voter rolls to see if dead and ineligible voters remain registered. On election day, volunteers will fan out across thousands of American polling places armed with pen and paper and record what happened.


For exercising this noble civic undertaking, the headlines of the New York Times scream “Voter Harassment Circa 2012.” The Times tells us “a Tea Party group, True the Vote, descends on a largely minority precinct and combs the registration records . . . nonexistent [voter fraud] is used as an excuse to reduce the political rights of minorities, the poor, students, older Americans and other groups that tend to vote Democratic.”


This is an outright lie. “

“If I could turn back time. . . ” Cher would be relevant

It is always a hoot watching celebrities become unhinged.  Last week it was Madonna endorsing the “black muslim in the White House.”  (Yes, really, watch the link).  Today, it’s Cher, 66, who has gone off the deep end with racial paranoia.  Twitchy has the full story of the rants from Cher, aka “deep pocket defendant.”   A snip:


From a happier, less unhinged time, a video from the Voting Rights expert: