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Nevada revisits mail-in ballot debate after 2020 spotlight
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Nevada revisits mail-in ballot debate after 2020 spotlight
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Nevada to revisit mail-in ballot debate after 2020 spotlight
SAM METZ, AP / Report for America
April 1, 2021
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1of3FILE - In this Nov. 5, 2020, file photo, a county election worker scans mail-in ballots as observers watch at a tabulating area at the Clark County Election Department in Las Vegas. Nevada lawmakers are considering sending mail-in ballots to all active voters in future elections after passing a law last summer that directed election officials to do so to prevent the coronavirus from spreading at polling places. A legislative committee is scheduled on Thursday, April 1, 2021, to hear a proposal to make the policy permanent.John Locher/APShow MoreShow Less
Nevada to revisit mail-in ballot debate after 2020 spotlight
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11 Min Read
A post has been circulating on social media which claims that the Nevada Attorney General, Aaron Ford, admitted to changing signature verifications manually for over 200,000 votes. His office told Reuters this is false. Following the 2020 U.S. presidential election the Trump campaign and its allies filed several lawsuits in Nevada related to automated signature matching, none of which were successful.
“Nevada AG admits to changing signature verifications manually for over 200,000 votes. Everyone knows this, right?” says the post (here). The same post also circulated in November 2020, after the U.S. presidential election (here , here , here), and was debunked at the time by fact checkers PolitiFact and USA Today (here , here).