From Election Integrity Commission members accuse New Hampshire voters of fraud
Retweeted by David Fahrenthold: https://twitter.com/fahrenthold
In one hour, I found four legit NH voters whom Kobach accused of being fraudulent.
Election Integrity Commission members accuse New Hampshire voters of fraud
By David Weigel September 8 at 9:06 AM
....
Kobach apparently made no attempt to contact voters whod cast ballots but held out-of-state IDs. Thursday night, The Washington Post asked voters whod done so to tell their stories; three did so within 60 minutes college students, who were living in New Hampshire but did not change their licenses.
....
Its possible that thousands of other New Hampshire college students voted the same way; the ability of temporary residents to swing close elections has been controversial in the state for years, as Democrats go through the same biennial battle to drive up turnout on campuses.
Apparently, Kobach is saying that voting should be limited to people who drive cars,
said David Becker, director of the Center for Election Innovation. Hes basically saying Bill Gardner, New Hampshires secretary of state his colleague is incompetent. And hes doing it without a basis.
....
But Kobach was only the most prominent commission member mangling the data. J. Christian Adams, a commission member who has
sometimes accused voters of fraud based on badly flawed data,
wrote Thursday that the 5,000-plus voters who had voted in 2016 but had not switched their IDs could no longer be found in New Hampshire.
That was false: Even the chair of Dartmouths College Democrats, Jennifer West, said Thursday that she held an out-of-state ID while studying and organizing voters in New Hampshire.
Nonetheless, Kobach and the commission will arrive in New Hampshire next week at Patrick Derenzes old campus, St. Anselm College to discuss, among other things, election integrity issues affecting public confidence.
David Weigel is a national political correspondent covering Congress and grassroots political movements. He's the author of "The Show That Never Ends," a history of progressive rock music. Follow @daveweigel
J. Christian Adams used to live not far from me. He's still nearby.