MICHIGAN DEMS ARE PUTTING DEAD PEOPLE BACK ON THE VOTER ROLLS
In a recent Michigan House Election Integrity Committee hearing, State Rep. Rachelle Smit (R), a former township clerk with direct experience managing voter rolls, shared alarming personal anecdotes highlighting persistent issues with deceased individuals reappearing on Michigan's voter registration database. She recounted personally removing a dead voter from her township's rolls—only to later find the name reinstated by the Secretary of State's office, leading to the mailing of ballot applications to that deceased person. Smit also described a family member who died nearly 20 years earlier but was inexplicably added back to the rolls around the 2020 election cycle, receiving unauthorized voter application mailings at an old address. These incidents, she argued, underscore systemic flaws and inadequate oversight under Democratic leadership in the Secretary of State's office, fueling ongoing Republican calls for stronger voter roll maintenance, transparency, and reforms like proof-of-citizenship requirements to safeguard election integrity in the state.
