What else?

Check the legal filings. It’s all in there. It’s not just an audit that is being sought.

Nah, don’t care enough, I will wait for headlines if they ever find anything provable in court.

Name the state you can live anywhere you want and not have to change precincts or vote absentee.

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I think in many cases students can move to college and vote at home. Same with military deployments.

So your mailing address changes, but your registration remains the same.

Absentee covers this, but I don’t see how that precludes someone voting in person… especially if they are nearby, visiting home or just plain old fashioned about voting in person.

3000 is a small enough number that these scenarios are all plausible to me at that rate

Yes absentee covers that. He didn’t say he voted absentee that was kinda my point. I don’t believe Conan was talking about people absentee voting.

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But they can also vote in person. I am thinking students and military ppl who are home in Nov, but at some point during the year (or prior) maintained an address somewhere else.

3000 is a small number so even slightly unusual arrangements (like flunking out of college or sharing time between two cities work/home) are plausible
To cover why an in person voter might have an address different than the registration address.

Not to mention mistaken analysis like mismatching names when compiling this list.

I hope we get more info. I am not excusing this, just tempering the assumptions with reasonable scenarios.

I think the confusion is you saying people can go home and vote. Which is correct they are going to vote were they are registered. WW said he could vote were he was not registered and not by absentee. I agree with the rest of what you are saying. I am just wondering where you can vote out of precinct and not absentee.

No. This is flagrant rule breaking if accurate.

Not college or absentee.

People moved and voted anyway.

I voted in the same district in upstate New York for 20 years and voted via mail-in ballot while living in…

Florida
Japan
California
Tennessee

Over that 20 years I was probably physically in my home town less than 180 days.

WW

Camp said: “He also said there were 3000 people who voted after moving their residence.”

I moved my residence many times over that 20-year period and continued to vote in my home town via absentee ballot.

I don’t see there being any confusion. Just because someone changes their residence does not mean that it automatically means they are not eligible to vote.

And just to be clear, WW DID NOT say he could vote were he was not registered and not by absentee.

I voted where I was registered (New York), but not where I lived (other places), and did vote by absentee.

WW

So let’s clarify.

You weren’t talking about just voting, you were talking about in-person voting correct?

As I showed it is perfectly legal, under the correct circumstances, to vote legally after moving to a new location.

WW

Ahh. That sounds wrong.

I’ve heard of provision ballots allowed in some places/circumstances but don’t know where that is or how they handle local-specific down ballot races.

Thanks for the clarification.

if you maintained a residence there and called it home. that is perfectly legal. if you’re military or a student you don’t even have to maintain a residence, just stay registered at your last address.

That’s why they recount.

To find mistakes.

They found this one and rectified it and included it in the certified count.

Allan

That is why I asked the question where you could do it without an absentee vote which you ever mentioned either deliberately or by accident. You know darn well Conan wasn’t talking about absentee voting.

Minor clarification: That’s why they recount when the margin is small.

If they always recounted they’d probably find errors like this all the time.

Just not enough to materially impact the race.

But it is just so easy to find small errors like this and pretend “this is just scratching the surface!”

All based on nothing more than the candidate one preferred saying “the other side cheated!”

Again, it was Camp that I responded to and : "Camp said: “He also said there were 3000 people who voted after moving their residence.”

It would be incumbent on the poster to clearly state what they mean not for me to assume what they mean.

I provided an example of at least one group of people that can change their residence without having to change their voting precinct. Hell, my daughter was raised in VA, moved to TX and established residence for voting. Now she’s in Germany with no residence in TX and can still vote there.

WW

It is also on the incumbent to mention they were talking about absentee voting not normal voting. Camp was not talking about absentee voting that was pretty easy to ascertain unless you think there were only 3000 absentee votes there.

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…and your post proves that. :sunglasses: :tumbler_glass: