How Bad Is Your State At Managing Voter Rolls? Find Out With This New Database – IOTW Report

How Bad Is Your State At Managing Voter Rolls? Find Out With This New Database

Federalist: The Public Interest Legal Foundation, a public interest law firm focused on cleaning state voter lists, has launched a new interactive tool for concerned citizens to monitor their states’ voter rolls. The database lists current voter roll errors in all 50 states’ voter lists including duplicate registrants, deceased voters or those who have moved out of state, and voters registered at commercial addresses.

Using PILF’s interactive map, users can click on each state to view a statistical breakdown of its voter roll errors with links to more information and a breakdown of PILF’s litigation pushing the state to clean its rolls.

According to the law firm, there are more than 317,000 dead registrants on state voter rolls across the country. Additionally, PILF’s tool reveals more than 54,000 same-address duplicate registrations and more than 449,000 interstate duplicates, meaning voters are registered in more than one state.

“We hope this interactive database will draw attention to the hundreds of thousands of errors in the voter rolls,” PILF President J. Christian Adams said in a statement. “Every error in the voter rolls is a vulnerability in our elections that can lead to fraud and abuse. Election officials must do their job and keep accurate voter rolls.” MORE

7 Comments on How Bad Is Your State At Managing Voter Rolls? Find Out With This New Database

  1. more bs. data is from 2018
    How are votes totaled, and can those totals be falsified over the internet??

    Importantly, shouldn’t voters know ANYTHING? A deceived ‘voter’ cancels the vote of a citizen, engaged in his community/nation.

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  2. 5 year old data doesn’t seem very useful. I question how California can have such low numbers when LA alone has to remove over 100,000 bad voter registrations. Maybe this isn’t so helpful after all,

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  3. Not very helpful. It told me there were this many in this category and that many in that category, but not how many total voters are registered. It always irks me when I don’t see the denominator.

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