“GOP finally found some voter fraud”: Mark Meadows registered to vote at an N.C.

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We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
"dive trailer"

Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows claimed to live in a small mobile home in North Carolina on his voter registration form, potentially violating voting laws,

Meadows, who previously represented a North Carolina district in Congress, sold his 2,200-square-foot home in the town of Sapphire, when he became Trump's top aide in March 2020. In September of that year, three weeks before the state's voter registration deadline, he listed the mobile home on a line of the form that asked for the residential address "where you physically live."

The home's former owner told the New Yorker that she did rent the property to Meadows' wife Debbie for about two months in the last several years but that Debbie had only "spent one or two nights" there. The couple's children also visited the property at some point, she said.

But Mark Meadows "did not come," she said. "He's never spent a night in here."

The former owner, who asked not to be named, ultimately sold the property to Ken Abele, who told the outlet that it was "really weird" that Meadows put the address on his voter registration.

"That's weird that he would do that," Abele said, noting that he had to make a lot of improvements on the property since purchasing it. "When I got it, it was not the kind of place you'd think the chief of staff of the President would be staying," he said.

Listing false information on a voter registration form is a federal crime. The New Yorker report noted that the Trump White House website used to link to a Heritage Foundation document listing cases of voter fraud, many of which included people who listed false residential addresses.

Melanie Thibault, the director of the board of elections in North Carolina's Macon County, told the New Yorker that she was "dumbfounded" that Meadows had listed the mobile home as his primary residence.

"I looked up this Mcconnell Road, which is in Scaly Mountain, and I found out that it was a dive trailer in the middle of nowhere, which I do not see him or his wife staying in," she said.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...red-to-vote-at-an-n-c-dive-trailer/ar-AAUKOQU

Bethea-Meadows-2.jpg
 
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Not surprising, similar to Texas who put up a bounty for disclosing voter fraud and the only individuals they caught were Republicans
 
"dive trailer"

Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows claimed to live in a small mobile home in North Carolina on his voter registration form, potentially violating voting laws,

Meadows, who previously represented a North Carolina district in Congress, sold his 2,200-square-foot home in the town of Sapphire, when he became Trump's top aide in March 2020. In September of that year, three weeks before the state's voter registration deadline, he listed the mobile home on a line of the form that asked for the residential address "where you physically live."

The home's former owner told the New Yorker that she did rent the property to Meadows' wife Debbie for about two months in the last several years but that Debbie had only "spent one or two nights" there. The couple's children also visited the property at some point, she said.

But Mark Meadows "did not come," she said. "He's never spent a night in here."

The former owner, who asked not to be named, ultimately sold the property to Ken Abele, who told the outlet that it was "really weird" that Meadows put the address on his voter registration.

"That's weird that he would do that," Abele said, noting that he had to make a lot of improvements on the property since purchasing it. "When I got it, it was not the kind of place you'd think the chief of staff of the President would be staying," he said.

Listing false information on a voter registration form is a federal crime. The New Yorker report noted that the Trump White House website used to link to a Heritage Foundation document listing cases of voter fraud, many of which included people who listed false residential addresses.

Melanie Thibault, the director of the board of elections in North Carolina's Macon County, told the New Yorker that she was "dumbfounded" that Meadows had listed the mobile home as his primary residence.

"I looked up this Mcconnell Road, which is in Scaly Mountain, and I found out that it was a dive trailer in the middle of nowhere, which I do not see him or his wife staying in," she said.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...red-to-vote-at-an-n-c-dive-trailer/ar-AAUKOQU

Bethea-Meadows-2.jpg

We need to prosecute all voter fraud.
 
Not surprising, similar to Texas who put up a bounty for disclosing voter fraud and the only individuals they caught were Republicans

It's the gaslighting and projection aspect of the modern Republican Party: whatever they are accusing others of doing is exactly what they are doing themselves. Sad.
 
"dive trailer"

Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows claimed to live in a small mobile home in North Carolina on his voter registration form, potentially violating voting laws,

Meadows, who previously represented a North Carolina district in Congress, sold his 2,200-square-foot home in the town of Sapphire, when he became Trump's top aide in March 2020. In September of that year, three weeks before the state's voter registration deadline, he listed the mobile home on a line of the form that asked for the residential address "where you physically live."

The home's former owner told the New Yorker that she did rent the property to Meadows' wife Debbie for about two months in the last several years but that Debbie had only "spent one or two nights" there. The couple's children also visited the property at some point, she said.

But Mark Meadows "did not come," she said. "He's never spent a night in here."

The former owner, who asked not to be named, ultimately sold the property to Ken Abele, who told the outlet that it was "really weird" that Meadows put the address on his voter registration.

"That's weird that he would do that," Abele said, noting that he had to make a lot of improvements on the property since purchasing it. "When I got it, it was not the kind of place you'd think the chief of staff of the President would be staying," he said.

Listing false information on a voter registration form is a federal crime. The New Yorker report noted that the Trump White House website used to link to a Heritage Foundation document listing cases of voter fraud, many of which included people who listed false residential addresses.

Melanie Thibault, the director of the board of elections in North Carolina's Macon County, told the New Yorker that she was "dumbfounded" that Meadows had listed the mobile home as his primary residence.

"I looked up this Mcconnell Road, which is in Scaly Mountain, and I found out that it was a dive trailer in the middle of nowhere, which I do not see him or his wife staying in," she said.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...red-to-vote-at-an-n-c-dive-trailer/ar-AAUKOQU

Bethea-Meadows-2.jpg

:laugh: Classic!
 
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