Politics

How Nevada’s Practice Of Mailing A Ballot To Each Registered Voter Makes Voter Roll Mess ‘Worse’

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Nevada’s system of automatically mailing a ballot to everyone on the voter roll makes the state’s failure to keep clean voter rolls more dire, says the president of a watchdog group that last week claimed to have found more than 100 people on Nevada’s voter rolls who voted in another state.

“The biggest problem is that they changed the law in 2021 so that every active voter is automatically mailed a ballot, so we need the cleanest possible voter files to protect against potential fraud,” Chuck Muth, president and CEO of the Citizen Outreach Foundation, told The Federalist.

Based in Nevada, the Citizen Outreach Foundation aims to ensure accuracy within the state’s voter rolls through the Pigpen Project. That initiative assists local election officials by identifying individuals who are no longer eligible to remain on the Silver State’s voter registration lists.

Last week, Muth’s team issued a report disclosing they have filed legal challenges contesting the eligibility of nearly 4,000 registrants they claim are no longer eligible to remain on Nevada’s voter rolls due to no longer living in the state. Most of these challenges (3,116) were filed in Clark County, the state’s most populous locality.

According to the report, the Pigpen Project used voter registration data managed by the Nevada secretary of state’s office and the U.S. Postal Service’s National Change of Address database to identify the allegedly unlawful registrations. It also compared this information with the “official voter registration records of 15 other states.”

With this information,

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