New Hampshire Joins Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program - Granite Grok

New Hampshire Joins Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program

So tell me again - vote stealing activists use NH Democrat Martha Fuller Clarks house to vote fromNew Hampshire will be submitting its November 2016 voter checklist to the Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program. This program compares our list to that of 29 other states. The goal is to look for voters registered in multiple states. We’d like to thank the legislature for making Ed Naile’s job easier.

The crosscheck program has been around for a while. We’ve written about it here and here, and did at least one interview here. And as you’d suspect, according to today’s Union Leader, Democrats don’t like the program, fearing for all of the usual suspects.

Critics of the program claim that it triggers widespread purges of checklists that disproportionately affect African-American, Asian and Latino voters and young apartment dwellers.

Is it just me or does this sound racist? Are Democrats implying that African-American, Asian and Latino voters have to move around a lot? Why would that be, exactly?

The real issue for Democrats in New Hampshire is that the crosscheck program WILL disproportionately identify non-residents with permanent domiciles in other states (or countries) using Democrat legislators (or even assistant NH AG) homes to steal votes in a swing state like New Hampshire.

Some of those states have laws regarding domicile that, unlike New Hampshire’s mean something. And, of course, it will be fun to have the crosscheck generating a readymade list of Democrat party activists in one handy place for us to investigate.

Our money is on there being few if any names of African-American, Asian or Latino voters but we do expect to find a lot of  “young apartment dwellers” where apartment means either an out-of-state voter-nest like this or just another Democrat party member’s address from which many absentee ballots are cast election year after election year by campaign operatives who may have never even set foot in the state.

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