Jason Snead
Coverage of Jason Snead in the Nexus archive.
- Dead voter allegation fuels concerns about voting safeguards as blue state official turns herself in
An Illinois alderman, Sylvia Sims Bolton, turned herself in after prosecutors alleged she submitted her deceased mother's vote-by-mail ballot, which was flagged during verification. The case has sparked concerns about mail-in voting and voter-roll safeguards, with election integrity advocates and the state GOP chairman highlighting the incident as an example of potential vulnerabilities.
- Dead voter allegation fuels concerns about voting safeguards as blue state official turns herself in
An Illinois alderman submitted her deceased mother's mail-in ballot, which was flagged before counting and led to her arrest. The case has sparked concerns about mail-in voting vulnerabilities and voter-roll safeguards, with critics calling for stricter election security measures.
- 34,000 dead people found on voter rolls prompts expert to slam Dems for resisting 'commonsense' cleanup
North Carolina discovered 34,000 deceased individuals on its voter rolls, prompting calls for the SAVE America Act to clean up voter lists. Republican Rep. Mark Harris criticized Democrats for resisting 'commonsense' measures, while the state collaborates with federal databases to remove ineligible voters.
- 34,000 dead people found on voter rolls prompts expert to slam Dems for resisting 'commonsense' cleanup
North Carolina discovered 34,000 deceased individuals on its voter rolls, prompting Republican calls for the SAVE America Act to enforce voter roll cleanups. Critics argue Democratic-led states resist 'commonsense' measures to remove ineligible voters, despite bipartisan efforts like cross-database checks.
- Virginia Dems accused of illegally ‘steamrolling’ state law that could upend redistricting crusade
Virginia Democrats face legal challenges over an extended legislative session used to pass a redistricting amendment, which critics argue violates the state constitution. The amendment, set for a voter referendum, could shift the congressional map to a 10-1 Democratic advantage, sparking accusations of legislative overreach.
- Virginia Dems accused of illegally ‘steamrolling’ state law that could upend redistricting crusade
Virginia Democrats face accusations of illegally extending a legislative session to pass a redistricting amendment, which could shift the state's congressional map to a 10-1 Democratic advantage. A legal challenge argues the session violated constitutional limits, while Democrats defend it as a response to Republican gerrymandering. The Supreme Court will decide if the referendum process was lawful.