65,000 North Carolina Voters Must Prove Identity Or Have Ballots Thrown Out In Supreme Court Race
Now do Wisconsin.
On election night, Griffin was beating incumbent Democrat Justice Allison Riggs by about 10,000 votes. Over the next nine days, votes started trickling in that eventually swung the total in Riggs’ favor by 734 votes……
Meanwhile, in the Wisconsin Supreme Court race:
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🚨Exclusive: 2,416,864 voter registration records have voter ID numbers ending in a zero, per a current Wis. statewide voter list. Importance:
Found: 444,000+ of them were assigned, each to a specific person, then reassigned over time to a new, different person. 444,000!!… pic.twitter.com/URmaRLOrSV
— Peter Bernegger (@PeterBernegger) April 5, 2025
65K North Carolina Voters Must Prove Identity Or Have Ballots Thrown Out In Supreme Court Race
An appeals court in North Carolina is requiring more than 65,000 voters in the hotly contested state Supreme Court race to provide proof of identity in order for their votes to be counted. The ruling could potentially swing the outcome of the race in favor of Republican candidate Judge Jefferson Griffin.
By: Breccan Theis, The Federalist, April 5, 2025:
The Friday decision was a win for Griffin, who challenged more than 60,000 ballots because the voters had not provided either a driver’s license or the last four digits of a Social Security Number upon registering, as required in North Carolina.
“The post-election protest process preserves the fundamental right to vote in free elections ‘on equal terms,’” the 2-1 majority opinion states. “This right is violated when ‘votes are not accurately counted [because] [unlawful] [ ] ballots are included in the election results.’ … The inclusion of even one unlawful ballot in a vote total dilutes the lawful votes and ‘effectively “disenfranchises”’ lawful voters” (brackets original).
This contest is the last statewide race to be decided in the country from the Nov. 5 election. On election night, Griffin was beating incumbent Democrat Justice Allison Riggs by about 10,000 votes. Over the next nine days, votes started trickling in that eventually swung the total in Riggs’ favor by 734 votes.
The Democrat-run North Carolina State Board of Elections has been trying to fast-track the certification of Riggs in this election, but the state Supreme Court has been blocking its ability to do so since Jan. 7.
Article posted with permission from Pamela Geller