Virginia
Related: About this forumOver 1,600 people removed from voter rolls under Youngkin order; groups seek court injunction
Over 1,600 voters have been removed from the rolls since an Aug. 7 executive order by Gov. Glenn Youngkin, plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the governor said Wednesday on a press call.
Seventy-five voter registrations were denied in the same time period, said Ryan Snow, counsel with Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.
The U.S. Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit against Virginia for removing voters from rolls within 90 days of this years elections. Virginias League of Women Voters and the Virginia Coalition for Immigrants Rights had previously filed a similar suit. Earlier this week a federal judge ordered the Youngkin administration to release the names of affected voters as part of discovery in the League of Women Voters case and officials had to comply by Wednesday.
Snow confirmed to The Mercury that the numbers came from a list provided to the plaintiffs. The Mercury also has a pending Freedom of Information Act request seeking numbers of people flagged for removal and how many may have been reinstated or not removed.
https://virginiamercury.com/briefs/over-1600-people-removed-from-voter-rolls-under-youngkin-order-groups-seek-court-injunction/
Think. Again.
(22,456 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(28,485 posts)When was the last time those voters voted? Last year? 2020? 2016? Earlier.
Having done door-to-door canvassing with voter lists in hand, it was quite amazing how many times an address would list people with three or four different surnames at the same address. Invariably only one surname was current.
So removing voters from the lists isn't the awful thing people here think it is.
