Anonymous ID: 35cdf8 Oct. 19, 2024, 12:16 p.m. No.21795426   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5430 >>5743

Michigan voter rolls inflated by 500K. State says it’s no issue. GOP disagrees

 

Voters in Flint cast ballots in 2022. In most municipalities and counties, there are more registered voters than people old enough to vote. State officials defend the rolls while Republicans remain skeptical the bloated rolls could lead to fraud.1/2

 

Michigan's voter rolls list 8.4 million registered voters, nearly 500,000 more than the eligible voting population

Republicans have sued claiming bloated rolls could lead to fraud

Michigan plans to remove over 600,000 inactive voters by 2027, but the state’s rolls remain among the nation’s most inflated

Three weeks from an election in which the state will likely play a prominent and potentially deciding role, Michigan has one of the most bloated voter rolls in the nation.

 

The state currently has 8.4 million registered voters, according to the latest records obtained by Bridge Michigan, nearly 500,000 more than the number of people in the state who are old enough to vote.

 

It’s the biggest imbalance among Great Lakes states and one of the largest in the nation.

 

While critics say the inflated rolls are not ideal, no one is suggesting they have contributed to fraud. One major cause of the imbalance: A voter-approved 2018 proposal that automatically registers those 18 and older to vote when applying for a driver license, unless they opt out.

 

Here’s a look at the issue.

 

What they’re saying

 

The Republican National Committee sued the state in federal court over the issue in February, demanding the state trim the rolls. The GOP in 2020 filed a similar suit, which was dismissed after thousands were removed from the rolls.

 

A spokesperson for Democratic Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, who has been named in multiple lawsuits, said the complaints are part of an effort to sow distrust of elections.

 

The lawsuits, including three filed in the last month, “lay the groundwork to overturn the results of the election if they don’t like them,” said Angela Benander.

 

The legal challenges “are an attempt to cause people to question the process,“ Benander said.

 

The GOP lawsuit did not allege fraud but argued the rolls increase the opportunity for it. The suit also claims that inflated rolls cause political parties to spend more money on mailers and other voter outreach.

 

Since the lawsuit was filed, more than 200,000 more people have registered.

 

Removing voters

 

By 2027, an estimated 606,800 inactive voters are expected to be removed from rolls, Benander said, pushing the total to just over 7.8 million.

 

That’s slightly less than the voting-age population and would moveMichigan to the third-highest imbalance among states to the fifth.

 

https://www.bridgemi.com/michigan-government/michigan-voter-rolls-inflated-500k-state-says-its-no-issue-gop-disagrees

Anonymous ID: 35cdf8 Oct. 19, 2024, 12:16 p.m. No.21795430   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5451 >>5453 >>5743

>>21795426

2/2

 

Why are inactive voters so hard to remove?

 

By federal law, the state or local clerks can remove voters from the rolls after the state notified they moved to another state, or if election mail sent to their home is returned as undeliverable and after they do not vote in two consecutive federal elections.

 

In 2018, the year Benson was elected, the state had roughly 7.8 million people of voting age, just under 7.5 million registered voters, of whom just under 6.5 million were considered active voters.

 

By 2022, the voting-age population had grown slightly, to 7.9 million. But registered voters jumped by over 700,000 to 8.2 million, of whom nearly 7.3 million were considered active voters.

 

Melanie Ryska, clerk for the city of Sterling Heights and a former Wayne County elections official, said the state’s “quite robust” voter rules led to larger voter rolls that are administered by the state and over 1,500 municipal clerks charged with handling elections.

 

Chris Thomas, a retired state elections official for four secretaries of state, said people who never had registered were more likely to get on the rolls if they got a new driver license after 2018.

 

Once on the rolls, it’s hard to get them off because of the federal rules, Thomas said.

 

“They’re not coming off,” he said. “Once you’re on you’re on until you die.”

 

What about fraud?

 

Thomas said he doesn’t fear widespread fraud in part because people have to knowingly falsify a signature.

 

“Impersonation fraud is almost non-existent,” he said.

 

Vote fraud happens, but it’s rare. Just this month Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel’s office charged four St. Clair Shores voters with voting twice in the August primary.

 

Most often, when allegations of fraud are raised, they end up baseless, including 2020 allegations of dead Michigan voters casting ballots.

 

Many of the counties with the highest imbalances are in Republican-leaning counties in northern Michigan.

 

Michigan’s voter rolls do include the names of 16,666 people who were born in 1924 or earlier.

 

But in 2024, only 1,121 of those people voted, according to a Bridge Michigan review of voter histories.

 

One of the oldest of that group of centenarians, Claudia Mae Williams of River Rouge, was very much alive in February when she celebrated her 109th birthday.

 

https://www.bridgemi.com/michigan-government/michigan-voter-rolls-inflated-500k-state-says-its-no-issue-gop-disagrees

Anonymous ID: 35cdf8 Oct. 19, 2024, 12:21 p.m. No.21795461   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5470 >>5477

Hezbollah drone targets Netanyahu’s Caesarea home; he says ‘agents of Iran tried to assassinate me’

No one hurt, but unconfirmed reports claim house was hit, though no sirens sounded; PM says those behind attack ‘made a bitter mistake’

By ToI Staff and Agencies 10/19/24

 

A drone fired by Hezbollah from Lebanon that exploded in the central seaside town of Caesarea early on Saturday targeted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s private home, his office said.

 

The premier and his wife were not present and no injuries were reported.

 

The short statement from Netanyahu’s office came after the IDF said that “a building had been hit” in the upscale town famous for its swanky villas and Roman ruins and amphitheater.

 

It was not immediately clear if the prime minister’s home suffered any damage.

 

On Saturday evening Netanyahu said in a statement: “The agents of Iran who tried to assassinate me and my wife today made a bitter mistake.” He said the attack would not deter him from continuing the war, and that anyone who harms Israelis will pay “a heavy price.”

 

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“We will continue to eliminate your terrorists, we will return our hostages from Gaza, we will return our residents in the north,” he promised.

 

An Axios report said that the drone hit the prime minister’s house. “This is the first time since the beginning of the war that a target affiliated directly with Netanyahu has been hit,” it reported, without elaboration.

 

The IDF said the drone was one of three launched from Lebanon, and that the other two were shot down.

 

The military said it was investigating the incident that apparently saw several failures of Israel’s warning system.

 

No warning sirens were sounded in Caesarea ahead of the drone impact and explosion.

 

Footage posted to social media appeared to show attack helicopters in the air that were apparently hunting the drone further to the north.

 

However, sirens did sound in Glilot north of Tel Aviv, which houses a major IDF intelligence base and the Mossad headquarters. Those sirens were not accompanied by warnings on the Home Front Command’s app or other platforms.

 

The drones and the interceptions also triggered warning sirens down Israel’s coast in the minutes ahead of the impact….

 

https://www.timesofisrael.com/hezbollah-drone-targets-netanyahus-house-in-caesarea-pm-wife-not-home-no-injuries/