29,673 Inactive Voters voted in North Carolina

More fraud...

29,673 Inactive Voters, who are not reachable at their home addresses, who voted between Sept. 9, when the early voting period began, and Election Day are now "inactive" in the voting registration system.

That number is not insignificant. Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, won by only 10,277 votes statewide over former Republican Gov. Pat McCrory last year.

http://www.wral.com/fact-check-were-tens-of-thousands-of-2016-voters-not-verified-/16533541/

Time for picture voter id!

What is an inactive voter. You use these terms that make no sense. There are inactive voters and people who improperly vote. You use these terms but nobody know what the terms actually mean.
 
What is an inactive voter. You use these terms that make no sense. There are inactive voters and people who improperly vote. You use these terms but nobody know what the terms actually mean.

Go to any Election Board site and look them up.... or you can read this article or others. These are official terms.
 
again, from your article:
"Voters become 'inactive' because mail sent by county boards of elections is returned as undeliverable or a voter doesn't respond to a confirmation mailing," said state Elections Director Kim Strach.

I carefully explained the process to you including how the initial and second confirmation mailings work. I suggest you read what I wrote and let it sink in.

If you still have a problem with it then you can call any county election board in North Carolina or the NC State Election Board at (919) 733-7173 or (866) 522-4723 and they will explain it to you.

Or go to the NC State Election Board website.
 
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Are you going to dismiss the fact that "not answering the confirmation" also renders them inactive? For all we know, 5% of those numbers are address changes, while the rest are people not bothering w/responding. If I were a betting man, I'd say that was the case.

So again, is it against voting rules to not answer the confirmation?
dumbass, the recipient doesn't make it unconfirmed, the U.S. Post Office makes it unconfirmed. Learn something about The United States of America and you could become a better person or stop interfering with our elections. You and Putin.
 
So the article is pretty clear that being inactive doesn't mean much. There are three thousand suspicious votes and it's not stated who they voted for.

Of course when your original claim is Tens of thousands and then you drop it to less than 3000, your credibility is shot.

I don't understand this argument by conservatives to cast doubt on election results. That can only hurt trump as he won the electoral college. Does anyone really think that the democrats are the only party that have some fraudulent votes. What would happen if they opened an investigation and found that a lot of rural counties were full of republican suspicious votes? In trumps own family there are three people who were registered to vote in multiple states.
 
So the article is pretty clear that being inactive doesn't mean much. There are three thousand suspicious votes and it's not stated who they voted for.

Of course when your original claim is Tens of thousands and then you drop it to less than 3000, your credibility is shot.

I don't understand this argument by conservatives to cast doubt on election results. That can only hurt trump as he won the electoral college. Does anyone really think that the democrats are the only party that have some fraudulent votes. What would happen if they opened an investigation and found that a lot of rural counties were full of republican suspicious votes? In trumps own family there are three people who were registered to vote in multiple states.

You appear to have reading comprehension issues. Let's go through the article.

"Civitas has pointed to failed voter verification issues before. Following the 2016 election, De Luca was the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit that complained roughly 3,000 people who registered and voted on the same day failed the state's verification process, which uses the mail."


The 3000 number is the number cited in the lawsuit filed by De Luca directly after the election in 2016. It is not the number cited recently by the state board of elections.


"According to the State Board of Elections, 29,673 people who voted between Sept. 9, when the early voting period began, and Election Day are now "inactive" in the voting registration system."

29,673 is the official number cited this past week by the State Board of Elections of people who voted and are now inactive as of February 2017. Inactive means that the person left no forwarding address for mailing, did not register to vote in any other county or state, did not change their driver's license address (as required by law when moving) in NC or any other state, and are not deceased. In other words these are phantom people.
 
You appear to have reading comprehension issues. Let's go through the article.

"Civitas has pointed to failed voter verification issues before. Following the 2016 election, De Luca was the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit that complained roughly 3,000 people who registered and voted on the same day failed the state's verification process, which uses the mail."


The 3000 number is the number cited in the lawsuit filed by De Luca directly after the election in 2016. It is not the number cited recently by the state board of elections.


"According to the State Board of Elections, 29,673 people who voted between Sept. 9, when the early voting period began, and Election Day are now "inactive" in the voting registration system."

29,673 is the official number cited this past week by the State Board of Elections of people who voted and are now inactive as of February 2017. Inactive means that the person left no forwarding address for mailing, did not register to vote in any other county or state, did not change their driver's license address (as required by law when moving) in NC or any other state, and are not deceased. In other words these are phantom people.

The article describes what "inactive" means in the system. There are lots of legitimate reasons for someone to be inactive in north Carolina but have been a legitimate voter during the time of the election.

Further, what if all those inactive voters, voted republican? After all Trump's own kids are registered in multiple states to vote.

You are making a mountain of a molehill.
 
The article describes what "inactive" means in the system. There are lots of legitimate reasons for someone to be inactive in north Carolina but have been a legitimate voter during the time of the election.

Further, what if all those inactive voters, voted republican? After all Trump's own kids are registered in multiple states to vote.

You are making a mountain of a molehill.

I don't care if they vote Republican or Democrat. If they are not legitimate voters then they should not be voting.

Most people who lived in more than one state are registered in more than one state to vote including me and Trump's own kids..... and millions of others in the U.S. Similar to the Trump kids, my status in these other states is set to "moved to new domicile outside current jurisdiction" or whatever the particular state uses for status for someone who moved out of state. When I registered to vote in my new state or got a new driver's license, my old state was informed and my voting registration status changed.

Can you explain to me the legitimate reasons for someone to be listed as inactive in North Carolina? The only one given in the article is the floods in eastern counties where people have left temporarily without a forwarding address due to the emergency & one day will return. However as covered by other local media outlets, the inactive registrations in these flooded counties are under 12 people.

Putting an end to illegal voting is not making a mountain out of a molehill. Defending the legitimacy of elections is at the core of American values. Voting needs to be monitored carefully to be sure it is conducted fairly and the each voter is allowed to vote in the particular election district.
 
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