The Justice Department yesterday sued Secretary of State William Galvin, asking a judge to make him turn over the names, addresses, driver’s license numbers and partial Social Security numbers of all the state’s voters, in an alleged bid to make sure we don’t have lots of fraudulent voting going on.
In the suit, filed in US District Court in Boston, the department's "civil rights" division charges that Galvin is attempting to stymie "the Attorney General’s investigation into Massachusetts’s compliance with federal election laws," ...
The Justice Department yesterday sued Secretary of State William Galvin, asking a judge to make him turn over the names, addresses, driver’s license numbers and partial Social Security numbers of all the state’s voters, in an alleged bid to make sure we don’t have lots of fraudulent voting going on.
In the suit, filed in US District Court in Boston, the department's "civil rights" division charges that Galvin is attempting to stymie "the Attorney General’s investigation into Massachusetts’s compliance with federal election laws," in particular the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, passed to allow motor-vehicle departments such as the RMV help people register to vote, and the Help America Vote Act of 2002, aimed at improving voting systems.
The regime has already sued 16 states to get all the information in state voter-registration rolls. Most of the states have provided data that does not include driver-license numbers or the last four digits of voters' Social-Security numbers.
The complaint alleges that regime lawyers first asked Galvin for the data in August, but that on Dec. 4, Galvin's top elections official said no, the office would not turn over all the information.