The Republican apparatus will not touch the Voter/Election fraud in CA. The machine is rubbing it in the faces of those that expect fair elections. They are saying they control it and nobody can do anything about it. They know nobody will do anything.
The Republican apparatus will not touch the Voter/Election fraud in CA. The machine is rubbing it in the faces of those that expect fair elections. They are saying they control it and nobody can do anything about it. They know nobody will do anything.
The Republican apparatus will not touch the Voter/Election fraud in CA. The machine is rubbing it in the faces of those that expect fair elections. They are saying they control it and nobody can do anything about it. They know nobody will do anything. This is the U.S.A.
how about raiding the communist takeover in CA instead?
wrong:
While states administer most elections in the United States, the federal government does have some enforcement powers over state-run elections, especially when federal law or constitutional rights are involved.
Some key areas include:
Constitutional authority
The U.S. Constitution gives states primary responsibility for conducting elections, but it also gives the federal government certain oversight powers:
The Elections Clause (Article I, Section 4) allows state legislatures to regulate the "Times, Places and Manner" of congressional elections, but Congress may alter those regulations.
Constitutional amendments, such as the Fifteenth Amendment, Nineteenth Amendment, Twenty-Fourth Amendment, and Twenty-Sixth Amendment, prohibit certain forms of voting discrimination and can be federally enforced.
Department of Justice enforcement
The United States Department of Justice can:
Investigate violations of federal voting-rights laws.
Bring civil lawsuits against states, counties, or election officials.
Pursue criminal prosecutions for election crimes such as voter intimidation, vote buying, ballot fraud, or conspiracies to deprive citizens of voting rights.
For example, the DOJ enforces the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, and the Help America Vote Act of 2002.
Federal courts
Federal courts can:
Order states to change election procedures that violate federal law or the Constitution.
Block unlawful voting restrictions.
Require redistricting plans to be redrawn if they violate federal law or constitutional protections.
Congress
Congress can:
Pass laws governing federal elections.
Set the date for federal elections.
Establish voting-rights protections.
Regulate campaign finance for federal offices through laws administered by the Federal Election Commission.
Limits on federal power
The federal government generally cannot simply take over or directly administer a state's elections. Election administration—polling places, ballot design, voter registration systems, vote counting, certification procedures, and local election officials—remains largely under state and local control unless a federal law or constitutional issue is implicated.
Presidential elections
Presidential elections are also primarily run by the states. However, federal courts, Congress, and the DOJ can become involved when federal constitutional or statutory issues arise. Congress additionally has a constitutional role in counting electoral votes and resolving certain disputes under federal law.
In short, states run elections day-to-day, but the federal government has significant enforcement authority to protect voting rights, enforce federal election laws, prosecute election crimes, and ensure compliance with the Constitution.
yes. the infinite two weeks. infinity is measured in 2 week increments. forever two weeks.