Democrats voted UNANIMOUSLY to not require the removal of dead people from Minnesota’s voter rolls last night

When a county auditor marks a voter as deceased, that status change does not trigger
immediate removal. Under current law there is no explicit statutory requirement compelling
removal; this creates a discrepancy between the administrative determination that a voter has
died and the formal cleansing of the rolls
That's s NOT TRUE.

the law gives county auditors within 60 days of notification by Secretary of State for the newly dead, to be removed.
 
That's s NOT TRUE.

the law gives county auditors within 60 days of notification by Secretary of State for the newly dead, to be removed.
Lie.

It’s at the discretion of the SOS.

The requirement is to list them as deceased, not remove them.
 
Now post the part where there is no requirement to remove dead people/


Within 60 days after receiving the list from the secretary of state, the county auditor shall change the status of those registrants to "deceased" in the statewide voter registration system.



2025 Minnesota Statutes


201.13 REPORT OF DECEASED VOTERS; CHANGES TO VOTER RECORDS.
Subdivision 1.Commissioner of health; reports of deceased residents. Pursuant to the Help America Vote Act of 2002, Public Law 107-252, the commissioner of health shall report monthly by electronic means to the secretary of state the name, address, date of birth, and county of residence of each individual 18 years of age or older who has died while maintaining residence in Minnesota since the last previous report. The secretary of state shall determine if any of the persons listed in the report are registered to vote and shall prepare a list of those registrants for each county auditor.

Within 60 days after receiving the list from the secretary of state, the county auditor shall change the status of those registrants to "deceased" in the statewide voter registration system.
 
I nearly got tossed from an election place in Alabama.

My son went into vote and they said he already voted. Son didnt want to push it. I did.

I asked how the hell did someone vote in his place. Nothing was ever done about it.
 
Within 60 days after receiving the list from the secretary of state, the county auditor shall change the status of those registrants to "deceased" in the statewide voter registration system.



2025 Minnesota Statutes


201.13 REPORT OF DECEASED VOTERS; CHANGES TO VOTER RECORDS.
Subdivision 1.Commissioner of health; reports of deceased residents. Pursuant to the Help America Vote Act of 2002, Public Law 107-252, the commissioner of health shall report monthly by electronic means to the secretary of state the name, address, date of birth, and county of residence of each individual 18 years of age or older who has died while maintaining residence in Minnesota since the last previous report. The secretary of state shall determine if any of the persons listed in the report are registered to vote and shall prepare a list of those registrants for each county auditor.

Within 60 days after receiving the list from the secretary of state, the county auditor shall change the status of those registrants to "deceased" in the statewide voter registration system.
Thanks for confirming I am correct, and you are a liar.

Exactly what I said.

Dismissed.
 
Those who continually cry "stolen election, stolen election" have absolutely no standing in commenting on elections at all.
 
MAGA doesn’t care whether someone is dead or alive. They just want as many voters off the list as possible.
Just potential illegal voters.

The Islamocrat Cult wants as many illegal voters on the rolls as possible. Why would that be?

Hmmmmmm………
 
MAGA doesn’t care whether someone is dead or alive. They just want as many voters off the list as possible.
We had tens of thousands that were either dead or no longer residing in the state.
 
Those who continually cry "stolen election, stolen election" have absolutely no standing in commenting on elections at all.
Liar.

From my link:


Currently, there is a gap in Minnesota state law that permits deceased people to remain on voter
rolls. When a county auditor marks a voter as deceased, that status change does not trigger
immediate removal. Under current law there is no explicit statutory requirement compelling
removal; this creates a discrepancy between the administrative determination that a voter has
died and the formal cleansing of the rolls.


Because there is no credible reason to keep the deceased on Minnesota’s voter rolls, this bill
simply closes the loophole in Minnesota law, changing the removal of deceased voters from
discretionary to mandatory. It also addresses the existing backlog to ensure accuracy moving
forward.
This bill poses no barrier or risk to living voters. It does not disenfranchise anyone, in fact it does
the opposite. It is not extra administrative work or cost. This is not partisan, controversial, or
complicated. Every entry in the statewide system should represent a real, living, eligible
Minnesota voter. HF 3722 brings the state closer to that standard.
 
15th post
2025 Minnesota Statutes


201.13 REPORT OF DECEASED VOTERS; CHANGES TO VOTER RECORDS.
Subdivision 1.Commissioner of health; reports of deceased residents. Pursuant to the Help America Vote Act of 2002, Public Law 107-252, the commissioner of health shall report monthly by electronic means to the secretary of state the name, address, date of birth, and county of residence of each individual 18 years of age or older who has died while maintaining residence in Minnesota since the last previous report. The secretary of state shall determine if any of the persons listed in the report are registered to vote and shall prepare a list of those registrants for each county auditor. Within 60 days after receiving the list from the secretary of state, the county auditor shall change the status of those registrants to "deceased" in the statewide voter registration system.
So where’s the removal part?
 
Those who continually cry "stolen election, stolen election" have absolutely no standing in commenting on elections at all.
cartman-southpark.gif
 
That's s NOT TRUE.

the law gives county auditors within 60 days of notification by Secretary of State for the newly dead, to be removed.

Not so. The voter's status in the registration database is set to "deceased".

Dropping records is a dumb idea. (Unless you're intentionally trying to hide something.)

For auditing purposes, it is better to keep a chain of history in a database rather than dump records. Once records are purged, any investigator is S-O-L as it limits their ability to run purposeful queries.

For example, if a record marks a person as deceased as of 5/9/2023, one could easily check and see the voter-id was valid for the 2022 mid-term elections but flag any vote made after that date. But if the record was purged, there be no way to query the database to see if the voter-id was valid on the day of the 2022 mid-term.
 
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