Judicial Watch Forces Kentucky and California to Remove Almost 2-million Ineligible Voters from Voter Registration Rolls
July 19, 2019 in News by RBN Staff
Source: Need To Know | Gateway Pundit
Judicial Watch, a conservative watchdog group, announced that Kentucky is set to remove 250,000 inactive voters from registration voter rolls. Judicial Watch is working to clean up dirty voter rolls to reduce voter fraud in the 2020 election. Last month, Los Angeles County started removing an estimated 1.5 million inactive or ineligible voters from its rolls to comply with federal election laws. This is a result of a court settlement with Judicial Watch. Los Angeles County, with more than 10 million residents, has more voter registrations than it has citizens old enough to register. It’s the first time in 20 years that Los Angeles County has cleaned its voter rolls as required by federal law. -GEG
Once again Judicial Watch is doing the heavy lifting.
Conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch announced Monday that thanks to a consent judgment, Kentucky is set to remove 250,000 inactive voters from registration voter rolls.
This is in addition to the 1.6 million inactive voters names that are set to be removed from California’s voter rolls.
Judicial Watch is diligently working to clean up dirty voters rolls to reduce voter fraud leading up to the 2020 election.
We all know how much the Democrats love their dead voters!
Judicial Watch reported:
Judicial Watch announced today that in June Kentucky mailed address confirmation notices to 250,000 voters who are believed to have moved, thanks to a consent judgment agreed to by the Commonwealth. These registrations are probably outdated and will be cancelled if the voters fail to vote in future elections or to confirm their current addresses.
In the consent judgment, Kentucky acknowledges that the state is not in compliance with the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA): “[T]he practices currently in place in Kentucky do not comply with the NVRA’s requirement that states conduct a general voter registration list maintenance program that makes a reasonable effort to remove ineligible persons from the voter rolls due to a change in residence outside of the jurisdiction …”
The address confirmation notices were sent to about 7% of the names currently on Kentucky’s voter rolls.
As part of the consent judgment, the Kentucky State Board of Elections is to proceed with a canvass mailing “to identify registrants through mail returned as undeliverable who may have unreported moves since 2009.” Voters who do not respond to the notices sent by Kentucky and who do not vote in the next two federal elections must be removed from the voting rolls. Despite the consent judgment being signed a year ago, Democrat Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes’s office has been accused of improperly delaying the processing of previous mailings through 2018, delaying the final clean up of Kentucky’s voting rolls by at least two years.
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