>>I guess you still haven't read this then:
>>
>>
http://www.umich.edu/~lawrace/disenfranchise1.htm>>
>Yep, it's the dems. I uncovered dead voters (not really dead, it was live cheaters), voting felons, people who didn't live in the district,etc. I just got a new database of the participating voters in Shelby County and, on a whim, ran my code against it where I checked rootsweb.com against the name and dob. I ran my program for 1 day and it pulled over 1000 deceased voters. Many of these people were deceased two years ago, when I sent the list to the local Election Commission. It is a Democrat controlled group and they refuse the remove the deceased from their roles.
What's the law on this? I know that before motor voter, here in PA, if you didn't vote for 2 years, you were removed from the rolls. Motor voter changed that, but I can't find the federal rule. (I see that here in PA, it's 5 years before you can send a confirmation. Then, if no reply, you have to wait 2 more general elections.)
One source I found also indicates that laws vary on how you can remove dead people. It did say that a newspaper obit is sufficient under federal law (though PA requires a death certificate).
FWIW, BTW, the PA legislature that passed tougher rules for removing people was controlled by the Republicans.
Tamar