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Election analysts have reported that there are
more than 100 lawsuits across America that target different steps in the process. According to
Democracy Docket — a voting rights news platform that tracks election litigation — more than a dozen suits challenging the NVRA have been filed in 2024’s seven battleground states (Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin).
Almost all challenge technical aspects of the NVRA. For example, they allege:
- More voters on voter rolls than adults over age 18 (Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania).
- Hundreds of thousands of, or more than a million, errors in voter data (Michigan, North Carolina, Wisconsin).
- State isn’t following the National Voter Registration Act (Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania).
- Voters illegally used commercial addresses to register (Nevada).
- State using disallowed, out-of-state data to vet voters (Wisconsin).
- Not disclosing data/information used to vet voters (Pennsylvania).
Most of these claims have not been factually evaluated. And there are yet more voter-list-centered lawsuits. However, a large number of partisan suits does not mean there are massive problems. Indeed, on Oct. 7, the Supreme Court declined to hear a Pennsylvania suit challenging a White House directive to expand registration.
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