TX Attorney General: Trump is right about mail in voter fraud.

Nostra

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Oct 7, 2019
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There is more in the link. Anyone denying voter fraud by mail is a complete moron, a hack, or both.


Texas AG Ken Paxton: Trump is right and Twitter ‘fact check’ is wrong – mail-in ballot fraud is a real problem


In 2007, during a spirited debate over photo ID legislation while I was in the Texas Legislature, a Democratic lawmaker from Dallas objected to the bill on the grounds that it allowed voting by mail to proceed without photo identification.

The legislator said: “Vote by mail, that we know, is the greatest source of voter fraud in this state. In fact, all of the prosecutions by the attorney general – I shouldn’t say all, but a great majority of the prosecutions by the attorney general occur with respect to vote by mail.”

As the official now charged with prosecuting election fraud in Texas, I can say unequivocally that the legislator was right: going back more than a decade and continuing through the present day, around two-thirds of election fraud offenses prosecuted by my office have involved some form of mail-ballot fraud.

These prosecutions include instances of forgery and falsification of ballots.

One man pleaded guilty after forging 1,200 mail-in ballot applications, resulting in 700 suspected fraudulent votes in a 2017 Dallas election. He was identified after a voter, whose ballot he harvested, snapped a photo of him on her cellphone.

“Authentic” signatures are also collected from voters, either under false pretenses or by experienced harvesters who confidently gain compliance from voters, as illustrated in a video that surfaced during the 2018 primary in the Houston area.

The anonymous video appears to show how easily a ballot application and signature were collected from a voter by a campaign worker in less than 20 seconds. After providing her signature, the voter asked the worker: “Is this legal, what you’re doing?” The worker replied: “Yes, ma’am, we’ve done 400 already.”

In South Texas, a former U.S. Postal Service employee was convicted of bribery in a federal prosecution in 2017 for selling a list of absentee voters to vote harvesters for $1,200.

Once mail ballots go out, harvesters show up at a voter’s door and engage the voter to provide “voting assistance.” The variations are endless, but a common practice involves giving the voter the impression that the harvester is an election official.

Whatever the case, successful vote harvesters leave with a voter’s signature and a ballot that is either blank, voted in the way the harvester wants, or that can be modified (or disposed of) later.

Skilled vote harvesters appear friendly and helpful. They may engage the voter in reassuring political discourse while assisting the voter in filling out the ballot. One fraudster was convicted of unlawfully “assisting” elderly nursing home residents – including an Alzheimer’s patient –complete mail ballots.

Twitter’s head of site integrity, Yoel Roth, has attacked President Trump and his team as ‘ACTUAL NAZIS” and smeared Trump voters as supporting a “racist tangerine.”
These instances are just the tip of the iceberg. Mail ballot fraud has been documented across the country. In fact, the Heritage Foundation has helpfully assembled a searchable database of over 1,000 instances of election fraud resulting in some form of plea, penalty or judicial finding.

Many of those cases involving abuse of absentee ballots. Indeed, one of the most infamous instances of election fraud in recent memory – the 2018 contest for the 9th Congressional District in North Carolina – involved large-scale fraud conducted by ballot harvesters.


 
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More confirmed mail in vote fraud.................

Twitter claims 'no evidence' of mail-in voter fraud despite numerous convictions since 2016


witter this week slapped a warning label on some of Donald Trump's tweets for the first time, cautioning users that the president's "series of claims about potential voter fraud" were "unsubstantiated," citing "CNN, Washington Post and others" for authority. "Experts say mail-in ballots are very rarely linked to voter fraud," Twitter declared.

In an accompanying "What you need to know" list, the social media giant added that "fact checkers say there is no evidence that mail-in ballots are linked to voter fraud."


In fact, there have been numerous cases of mail-in voter fraud scattered widely across the country over the past four years, evidence that the absentee ballot system is open to at least some voter manipulation, even as many experts and pundits continue to insist otherwise.

According to data compiled by the Heritage Foundation, there have been around three dozen criminal convictions for absentee ballot fraud over the past four years, and those cases are but a small subset of over 200 convictions for various types of voter fraud the conservative organization says have occurred since 2016.

In one case from 2016, Indiana police officer Lowell Colen was convicted of absentee ballot fraud in an attempt to help his father win a city council election. Colen eventually pled guilty to four felony counts of voter fraud, with prosecutors claiming he filled out false registrations and forged numerous signatures.

In 2018, authorities arrested Florida man Bret Warren after they determined he had stolen five absentee ballots and fraudulently voted with them. Warren eventually pled no contest to two charges of false swearing in connection with voting.

Last year, former Gordon, Alabama mayor Elbert Melton was convicted of absentee ballot fraud in a mayoral race he won by just 16 votes.

In 2018, New Mexico authorities indicted Laura Seeds on 13 counts of voter fraud related to her husband's 2016 mayoral race. Seeds was eventually convicted in part for illegally possessing two absentee voter ballots; her husband Robert won the race by two votes.

Thousands of deceased registrants, double registrations

Absentee ballot fraud is just one method of exploiting flaws in the system to perpetrate voting fraud. In some cases, for instance, dead voters have been found to have cast votes in numerous elections, as a local CBS report found in Colorado several years ago. The same phenomenon was discovered in Chicago as well.

The potential for posthumous voter fraud may be more acute in some states than others. The Public Interest Legal Foundation, a voting watchdog group, sent a notification letter to New Jersey's Division of Elections this week informing the state that it had found a total of nearly 12,000 "deceased individuals with an active registration in the State of New Jersey." Roughly half of those, the foundation said, had died eight or more years ago.

Media reports have revealed that numerous deceased residents of New Jersey have in the past received vote-by-mail notices.

The Public Interest Legal Foundation also told New Jersey it found "830 potentially duplicated registrations across state lines with apparent voting credits assigned by election officials in each state for the 2018 General Election." The foundation recently sent similar letters to Virginia and New Mexico.

Cash-for-ballot fraud, 'joke' tampering

Recently, some voter fraud cases have made headlines. Last week, a Democratic party official in Philadelphia pled guilty to a voter-fraud-for-cash scheme there.

Domenick DeMuro, a Democratic ward chairman in that city, admitted that he had "fraudulently stuffed the ballot box by literally standing in a voting booth and voting over and over, as fast as he could, while he thought the coast was clear," the Philadelphia U.S. Attorney's Office said.

DeMuro allegedly had a network of clients who paid him significant sums of money to rig elections.

A mail carrier in Pendleton County, West Virginia, meanwhile, recently admitted to investigators that he altered mail-in voting ballot documents. The U.S. Attorney's Office of the Northern District of West Virginia said in a press release yesterday that it was charging Thomas Cooper, a worker with the U.S. Postal Service, with "attempted election fraud."

An affidavit supplied by that office to Just the News states that last month the Pendleton County Clerk received several absentee mail-in ballot requests "in which the voter’s party-ballot request appeared to have been altered by use of a black-ink pen." On five of the requests, "it appeared that the voters ballot choice was changed from Democrat to Republican

West Virginia Attorney General Investigator Bennie Cogar was assigned to investigate the case, he said in the affidavit, leading both Cogar and U.S. Postal Inspector Todd Phillips to Tommy Cooper, a mail carrier for Pendleton County. "During the interview, Cooper said that 'yes,' he changed the requests that had been placed in the mail," the affidavit states.

 
There is more in the link. Anyone denying voter fraud by mail is a complete moron, a hack, or both.


Texas AG Ken Paxton: Trump is right and Twitter ‘fact check’ is wrong – mail-in ballot fraud is a real problem


In 2007, during a spirited debate over photo ID legislation while I was in the Texas Legislature, a Democratic lawmaker from Dallas objected to the bill on the grounds that it allowed voting by mail to proceed without photo identification.

The legislator said: “Vote by mail, that we know, is the greatest source of voter fraud in this state. In fact, all of the prosecutions by the attorney general – I shouldn’t say all, but a great majority of the prosecutions by the attorney general occur with respect to vote by mail.”

As the official now charged with prosecuting election fraud in Texas, I can say unequivocally that the legislator was right: going back more than a decade and continuing through the present day, around two-thirds of election fraud offenses prosecuted by my office have involved some form of mail-ballot fraud.

These prosecutions include instances of forgery and falsification of ballots.

One man pleaded guilty after forging 1,200 mail-in ballot applications, resulting in 700 suspected fraudulent votes in a 2017 Dallas election. He was identified after a voter, whose ballot he harvested, snapped a photo of him on her cellphone.

“Authentic” signatures are also collected from voters, either under false pretenses or by experienced harvesters who confidently gain compliance from voters, as illustrated in a video that surfaced during the 2018 primary in the Houston area.

The anonymous video appears to show how easily a ballot application and signature were collected from a voter by a campaign worker in less than 20 seconds. After providing her signature, the voter asked the worker: “Is this legal, what you’re doing?” The worker replied: “Yes, ma’am, we’ve done 400 already.”

In South Texas, a former U.S. Postal Service employee was convicted of bribery in a federal prosecution in 2017 for selling a list of absentee voters to vote harvesters for $1,200.

Once mail ballots go out, harvesters show up at a voter’s door and engage the voter to provide “voting assistance.” The variations are endless, but a common practice involves giving the voter the impression that the harvester is an election official.

Whatever the case, successful vote harvesters leave with a voter’s signature and a ballot that is either blank, voted in the way the harvester wants, or that can be modified (or disposed of) later.

Skilled vote harvesters appear friendly and helpful. They may engage the voter in reassuring political discourse while assisting the voter in filling out the ballot. One fraudster was convicted of unlawfully “assisting” elderly nursing home residents – including an Alzheimer’s patient –complete mail ballots.


Twitter’s head of site integrity, Yoel Roth, has attacked President Trump and his team as ‘ACTUAL NAZIS” and smeared Trump voters as supporting a “racist tangerine.”
These instances are just the tip of the iceberg. Mail ballot fraud has been documented across the country. In fact, the Heritage Foundation has helpfully assembled a searchable database of over 1,000 instances of election fraud resulting in some form of plea, penalty or judicial finding.

Many of those cases involving abuse of absentee ballots. Indeed, one of the most infamous instances of election fraud in recent memory – the 2018 contest for the 9th Congressional District in North Carolina – involved large-scale fraud conducted by ballot harvesters.


/----/ Well, as soon as the Twitter Thought Police get a hold of this article, they will promptly reverse their policy. I'm sure of it.
 
If you are elderly or living outside of your voting district you can vote absentee...but blanketly send ballots out to everyone is OUT OF THE QUESTION.....nice try libtards...if you are afraid to vote than don't vote.....it is no different than a trip to the store.....
 
There is more in the link. Anyone denying voter fraud by mail is a complete moron, a hack, or both.


Texas AG Ken Paxton: Trump is right and Twitter ‘fact check’ is wrong – mail-in ballot fraud is a real problem


In 2007, during a spirited debate over photo ID legislation while I was in the Texas Legislature, a Democratic lawmaker from Dallas objected to the bill on the grounds that it allowed voting by mail to proceed without photo identification.

The legislator said: “Vote by mail, that we know, is the greatest source of voter fraud in this state. In fact, all of the prosecutions by the attorney general – I shouldn’t say all, but a great majority of the prosecutions by the attorney general occur with respect to vote by mail.”

As the official now charged with prosecuting election fraud in Texas, I can say unequivocally that the legislator was right: going back more than a decade and continuing through the present day, around two-thirds of election fraud offenses prosecuted by my office have involved some form of mail-ballot fraud.

These prosecutions include instances of forgery and falsification of ballots.

One man pleaded guilty after forging 1,200 mail-in ballot applications, resulting in 700 suspected fraudulent votes in a 2017 Dallas election. He was identified after a voter, whose ballot he harvested, snapped a photo of him on her cellphone.

“Authentic” signatures are also collected from voters, either under false pretenses or by experienced harvesters who confidently gain compliance from voters, as illustrated in a video that surfaced during the 2018 primary in the Houston area.

The anonymous video appears to show how easily a ballot application and signature were collected from a voter by a campaign worker in less than 20 seconds. After providing her signature, the voter asked the worker: “Is this legal, what you’re doing?” The worker replied: “Yes, ma’am, we’ve done 400 already.”

In South Texas, a former U.S. Postal Service employee was convicted of bribery in a federal prosecution in 2017 for selling a list of absentee voters to vote harvesters for $1,200.

Once mail ballots go out, harvesters show up at a voter’s door and engage the voter to provide “voting assistance.” The variations are endless, but a common practice involves giving the voter the impression that the harvester is an election official.

Whatever the case, successful vote harvesters leave with a voter’s signature and a ballot that is either blank, voted in the way the harvester wants, or that can be modified (or disposed of) later.

Skilled vote harvesters appear friendly and helpful. They may engage the voter in reassuring political discourse while assisting the voter in filling out the ballot. One fraudster was convicted of unlawfully “assisting” elderly nursing home residents – including an Alzheimer’s patient –complete mail ballots.


Twitter’s head of site integrity, Yoel Roth, has attacked President Trump and his team as ‘ACTUAL NAZIS” and smeared Trump voters as supporting a “racist tangerine.”
These instances are just the tip of the iceberg. Mail ballot fraud has been documented across the country. In fact, the Heritage Foundation has helpfully assembled a searchable database of over 1,000 instances of election fraud resulting in some form of plea, penalty or judicial finding.

Many of those cases involving abuse of absentee ballots. Indeed, one of the most infamous instances of election fraud in recent memory – the 2018 contest for the 9th Congressional District in North Carolina – involved large-scale fraud conducted by ballot harvesters.


I thank you for some information that appears credible. I wish the AG had supplied some details on how many convictions he is talking about, numbers, etc. Like links? If you were so inclined, maybe you could research that for us?
 
Paxton? That sleaze ball was previosuly arrested and charged with security fraud. Ken Paxton’s criminal trial has been pending for nearly four years. Here’s a timeline of his legal drama. Only in Texas would they elect an AG with a criminal history of fraud.

Voter Fraud has been Paxton's go to issue. Despite Paxton's many efforts he has failed to find any rampant voter fraud in Texas. When asked by the House of Representatives to show proof of Voter fraud he refused and ran away with his tail between his legs. Texas AG Refuses House Demand for Voter-Fraud Files

Well, I'll give Paxton this. He is an expert on how to commit fraud.
 
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More confirmed mail in vote fraud.................

Twitter claims 'no evidence' of mail-in voter fraud despite numerous convictions since 2016


witter this week slapped a warning label on some of Donald Trump's tweets for the first time, cautioning users that the president's "series of claims about potential voter fraud" were "unsubstantiated," citing "CNN, Washington Post and others" for authority. "Experts say mail-in ballots are very rarely linked to voter fraud," Twitter declared.

In an accompanying "What you need to know" list, the social media giant added that "fact checkers say there is no evidence that mail-in ballots are linked to voter fraud."


In fact, there have been numerous cases of mail-in voter fraud scattered widely across the country over the past four years, evidence that the absentee ballot system is open to at least some voter manipulation, even as many experts and pundits continue to insist otherwise.

According to data compiled by the Heritage Foundation, there have been around three dozen criminal convictions for absentee ballot fraud over the past four years, and those cases are but a small subset of over 200 convictions for various types of voter fraud the conservative organization says have occurred since 2016.

In one case from 2016, Indiana police officer Lowell Colen was convicted of absentee ballot fraud in an attempt to help his father win a city council election. Colen eventually pled guilty to four felony counts of voter fraud, with prosecutors claiming he filled out false registrations and forged numerous signatures.

In 2018, authorities arrested Florida man Bret Warren after they determined he had stolen five absentee ballots and fraudulently voted with them. Warren eventually pled no contest to two charges of false swearing in connection with voting.

Last year, former Gordon, Alabama mayor Elbert Melton was convicted of absentee ballot fraud in a mayoral race he won by just 16 votes.

In 2018, New Mexico authorities indicted Laura Seeds on 13 counts of voter fraud related to her husband's 2016 mayoral race. Seeds was eventually convicted in part for illegally possessing two absentee voter ballots; her husband Robert won the race by two votes.

Thousands of deceased registrants, double registrations

Absentee ballot fraud is just one method of exploiting flaws in the system to perpetrate voting fraud. In some cases, for instance, dead voters have been found to have cast votes in numerous elections, as a local CBS report found in Colorado several years ago. The same phenomenon was discovered in Chicago as well.

The potential for posthumous voter fraud may be more acute in some states than others. The Public Interest Legal Foundation, a voting watchdog group, sent a notification letter to New Jersey's Division of Elections this week informing the state that it had found a total of nearly 12,000 "deceased individuals with an active registration in the State of New Jersey." Roughly half of those, the foundation said, had died eight or more years ago.

Media reports have revealed that numerous deceased residents of New Jersey have in the past received vote-by-mail notices.

The Public Interest Legal Foundation also told New Jersey it found "830 potentially duplicated registrations across state lines with apparent voting credits assigned by election officials in each state for the 2018 General Election." The foundation recently sent similar letters to Virginia and New Mexico.

Cash-for-ballot fraud, 'joke' tampering

Recently, some voter fraud cases have made headlines. Last week, a Democratic party official in Philadelphia pled guilty to a voter-fraud-for-cash scheme there.

Domenick DeMuro, a Democratic ward chairman in that city, admitted that he had "fraudulently stuffed the ballot box by literally standing in a voting booth and voting over and over, as fast as he could, while he thought the coast was clear," the Philadelphia U.S. Attorney's Office said.

DeMuro allegedly had a network of clients who paid him significant sums of money to rig elections.

A mail carrier in Pendleton County, West Virginia, meanwhile, recently admitted to investigators that he altered mail-in voting ballot documents. The U.S. Attorney's Office of the Northern District of West Virginia said in a press release yesterday that it was charging Thomas Cooper, a worker with the U.S. Postal Service, with "attempted election fraud."

An affidavit supplied by that office to Just the News states that last month the Pendleton County Clerk received several absentee mail-in ballot requests "in which the voter’s party-ballot request appeared to have been altered by use of a black-ink pen." On five of the requests, "it appeared that the voters ballot choice was changed from Democrat to Republican

West Virginia Attorney General Investigator Bennie Cogar was assigned to investigate the case, he said in the affidavit, leading both Cogar and U.S. Postal Inspector Todd Phillips to Tommy Cooper, a mail carrier for Pendleton County. "During the interview, Cooper said that 'yes,' he changed the requests that had been placed in the mail," the affidavit states.

Tommy Cooper, a mail carrier for Pendleton County. ....is a dumb fuck to think he could get away with that......i wonder how many years he just threw away?...
 
The feds could solve the whole god-damned problem by issuing every citizen a photo ID for anyone above the age of 18. Just like the ID's we get from the VA. They should be free to every citizen 18 and above.
 
If you are elderly or living outside of your voting district you can vote absentee...but blanketly send ballots out to everyone is OUT OF THE QUESTION.....nice try libtards...if you are afraid to vote than don't vote.....it is no different than a trip to the store.....
Ahem, the cashiers are young attractive females, the voter station has octogenarian females..
 
Paxton? That sleaze ball was previosuly arrested and charged with security fraud. Ken Paxton’s criminal trial has been pending for nearly four years. Here’s a timeline of his legal drama. Only in Texas would they elect an AG with a criminal history of fraud.

Voter Fraud has been Paxton's go to issue. Despite Paxton's many efforts he has failed to find any rampant voter fraud in Texas. When asked by the House of Representatives to show proof of Voter fraud he refused and ran away with his tail between his legs. Texas AG Refuses House Demand for Voter-Fraud Files

Well, I'll give Paxton this. He is an expert on how to commit fraud.
Maybe he's telling the truth. I'd like to know if he is. Facts don't scare me.
 
There is more in the link. Anyone denying voter fraud by mail is a complete moron, a hack, or both.


Texas AG Ken Paxton: Trump is right and Twitter ‘fact check’ is wrong – mail-in ballot fraud is a real problem


In 2007, during a spirited debate over photo ID legislation while I was in the Texas Legislature, a Democratic lawmaker from Dallas objected to the bill on the grounds that it allowed voting by mail to proceed without photo identification.

The legislator said: “Vote by mail, that we know, is the greatest source of voter fraud in this state. In fact, all of the prosecutions by the attorney general – I shouldn’t say all, but a great majority of the prosecutions by the attorney general occur with respect to vote by mail.”

As the official now charged with prosecuting election fraud in Texas, I can say unequivocally that the legislator was right: going back more than a decade and continuing through the present day, around two-thirds of election fraud offenses prosecuted by my office have involved some form of mail-ballot fraud.

These prosecutions include instances of forgery and falsification of ballots.

One man pleaded guilty after forging 1,200 mail-in ballot applications, resulting in 700 suspected fraudulent votes in a 2017 Dallas election. He was identified after a voter, whose ballot he harvested, snapped a photo of him on her cellphone.

“Authentic” signatures are also collected from voters, either under false pretenses or by experienced harvesters who confidently gain compliance from voters, as illustrated in a video that surfaced during the 2018 primary in the Houston area.

The anonymous video appears to show how easily a ballot application and signature were collected from a voter by a campaign worker in less than 20 seconds. After providing her signature, the voter asked the worker: “Is this legal, what you’re doing?” The worker replied: “Yes, ma’am, we’ve done 400 already.”

In South Texas, a former U.S. Postal Service employee was convicted of bribery in a federal prosecution in 2017 for selling a list of absentee voters to vote harvesters for $1,200.

Once mail ballots go out, harvesters show up at a voter’s door and engage the voter to provide “voting assistance.” The variations are endless, but a common practice involves giving the voter the impression that the harvester is an election official.

Whatever the case, successful vote harvesters leave with a voter’s signature and a ballot that is either blank, voted in the way the harvester wants, or that can be modified (or disposed of) later.

Skilled vote harvesters appear friendly and helpful. They may engage the voter in reassuring political discourse while assisting the voter in filling out the ballot. One fraudster was convicted of unlawfully “assisting” elderly nursing home residents – including an Alzheimer’s patient –complete mail ballots.


Twitter’s head of site integrity, Yoel Roth, has attacked President Trump and his team as ‘ACTUAL NAZIS” and smeared Trump voters as supporting a “racist tangerine.”
These instances are just the tip of the iceberg. Mail ballot fraud has been documented across the country. In fact, the Heritage Foundation has helpfully assembled a searchable database of over 1,000 instances of election fraud resulting in some form of plea, penalty or judicial finding.

Many of those cases involving abuse of absentee ballots. Indeed, one of the most infamous instances of election fraud in recent memory – the 2018 contest for the 9th Congressional District in North Carolina – involved large-scale fraud conducted by ballot harvesters.


I thank you for some information that appears credible. I wish the AG had supplied some details on how many convictions he is talking about, numbers, etc. Like links? If you were so inclined, maybe you could research that for us?
No thanks. Hire a secretary.
 
Paxton? That sleaze ball was previosuly arrested and charged with security fraud. Ken Paxton’s criminal trial has been pending for nearly four years. Here’s a timeline of his legal drama. Only in Texas would they elect an AG with a criminal history of fraud.

Voter Fraud has been Paxton's go to issue. Despite Paxton's many efforts he has failed to find any rampant voter fraud in Texas. When asked by the House of Representatives to show proof of Voter fraud he refused and ran away with his tail between his legs. Texas AG Refuses House Demand for Voter-Fraud Files

Well, I'll give Paxton this. He is an expert on how to commit fraud.
Feel free to disprove all the court cases he has brought, Dummy.

Or, just whine and cry like the little bitch you are.
 
Paxton? That sleaze ball was previosuly arrested and charged with security fraud. Ken Paxton’s criminal trial has been pending for nearly four years. Here’s a timeline of his legal drama. Only in Texas would they elect an AG with a criminal history of fraud.

Voter Fraud has been Paxton's go to issue. Despite Paxton's many efforts he has failed to find any rampant voter fraud in Texas. When asked by the House of Representatives to show proof of Voter fraud he refused and ran away with his tail between his legs. Texas AG Refuses House Demand for Voter-Fraud Files

Well, I'll give Paxton this. He is an expert on how to commit fraud.
Maybe he's telling the truth. I'd like to know if he is. Facts don't scare me.
That there are irregularities out there at times regarding the voting process, no one can seriously it. Does that mean that there is rampant fraud all over the nation? No it does not. One can take a few instances and shout: Look voter fraud! Buth those are local in nature, caught and prosecuted. Trump's own voter fraud commission found zilch. Paxton uses voter fraud for his own political advantage, like Trump, not because there is any.
 
The feds could solve the whole god-damned problem by issuing every citizen a photo ID for anyone above the age of 18. Just like the ID's we get from the VA. They should be free to every citizen 18 and above.
Voter IDs are free in Texas.
They should be if they want continuity of policy. I haven't been to hell er Texass since I got out of the army in 1986.
 
Paxton? That sleaze ball was previosuly arrested and charged with security fraud. Ken Paxton’s criminal trial has been pending for nearly four years. Here’s a timeline of his legal drama. Only in Texas would they elect an AG with a criminal history of fraud.

Voter Fraud has been Paxton's go to issue. Despite Paxton's many efforts he has failed to find any rampant voter fraud in Texas. When asked by the House of Representatives to show proof of Voter fraud he refused and ran away with his tail between his legs. Texas AG Refuses House Demand for Voter-Fraud Files

Well, I'll give Paxton this. He is an expert on how to commit fraud.
Maybe he's telling the truth. I'd like to know if he is. Facts don't scare me.
That there are irregularities out there at times regarding the voting process, no one can seriously it. Does that mean that there is rampant fraud all over the nation? No it does not. One can take a few instances and shout: Look voter fraud! Buth those are local in nature, caught and prosecuted. Trump's own voter fraud commission found zilch. Paxton uses voter fraud for his own political advantage, like Trump, not because there is any.
Buth those are local in nature, caught and prosecuted

You are dumb enough to believe every drunk driver is caught an prosecuted too, huh?
 
Paxton? That sleaze ball was previosuly arrested and charged with security fraud. Ken Paxton’s criminal trial has been pending for nearly four years. Here’s a timeline of his legal drama. Only in Texas would they elect an AG with a criminal history of fraud.

Voter Fraud has been Paxton's go to issue. Despite Paxton's many efforts he has failed to find any rampant voter fraud in Texas. When asked by the House of Representatives to show proof of Voter fraud he refused and ran away with his tail between his legs. Texas AG Refuses House Demand for Voter-Fraud Files

Well, I'll give Paxton this. He is an expert on how to commit fraud.
Feel free to disprove all the court cases he has brought, Dummy.

Or, just whine and cry like the little bitch you are.
Taking his words as true, everyone of those people were caught and prosecuted you moron. The Heritage Foundation study you found sites 1,228 cases of voter fraud out of "billions" cast. Get a grip, Nancy. There is no rampant voter fraud expect in the addled brains of Conservatives.
 
Paxton? That sleaze ball was previosuly arrested and charged with security fraud. Ken Paxton’s criminal trial has been pending for nearly four years. Here’s a timeline of his legal drama. Only in Texas would they elect an AG with a criminal history of fraud.

Voter Fraud has been Paxton's go to issue. Despite Paxton's many efforts he has failed to find any rampant voter fraud in Texas. When asked by the House of Representatives to show proof of Voter fraud he refused and ran away with his tail between his legs. Texas AG Refuses House Demand for Voter-Fraud Files

Well, I'll give Paxton this. He is an expert on how to commit fraud.
Feel free to disprove all the court cases he has brought, Dummy.

Or, just whine and cry like the little bitch you are.
Taking his words as true, everyone of those people were caught and prosecuted you moron. The Heritage Foundation study you found sites 1,228 cases of voter fraud out of "billions" cast. Get a grip, Nancy. There is no rampant voter fraud expect in the addled brains of Conservatives.
See post #18, Simpleton.

How many instances of voter fraud do you require before wanting to do something about it? Tell us your threshold of corruption.
 

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