Oklahoma removes 450,000 ineligible voters from rolls
Oklahoma election officials have removed more than 450,000 ineligible voters from the state’s rolls ahead of November’s election.
“Voting is our most sacred duty as Americans — and every Oklahoman wants to know their vote is securely cast and properly counted,” said Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt in a press release.
State election officials have removed 453,000 total ineligible voters since 2021, Stitt’s office announced Wednesday.
As part of “routine voter list maintenance,” the state has removed 5,607 felons, 14,993 duplicate registrations, 97,065 dead voters, and 143,682 voters who moved out of state, according to the release. During address verification, officials also canceled 194,962 inactive voters.
...
Arizona is taking a different route.
Ruling came after a 'coding oversight' in Arizona's election software
As I recall, I have always had to show an ID to vote in Texas. I find it odd that any state would allow ineligible people to vote.
Comments
Post a Comment