Judicial Watch finds 1.8 million 'ghost voters' in 29 states, warns of 'dirty elections'
By Jennifer Harper
The Washington Times
October 20, 2020
Judicial Watch has released a comparison study of Census Bureau population statistics and state voter registration data to reveal a notable disparity. The watch dog group is now warning of potential voter fraud and dirty voter rolls.
The study found that 352 U.S. counties in 29 states managed to have 1.8 million more registered voters than eligible voting-age citizens.
In other words, the registration rates of those counties exceeded 100% of eligible voters. The study found eight states showing state- wide registration rates exceeding 100%: Alaska, Colorado, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Vermont, reported Tom Fitton, president of the watchdog group.
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Judicial Watch finds 1.8 million 'ghost voters' in 29 states, warns of 'dirty elections'
Some of that excess ran as high as 187% in Texas, 177% in New Mexico and 171% in South Dakota.
The new study of excess or ghost voters highlights the recklessness of mailing blindly ballots and ballot applications to voter registration lists. Dirty voting rolls can mean dirty elections, Mr. Fitton noted.
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