Justice department allegedly investigating debunked 2020 Georgia election fraud claims
Source: The Guardian
Fri 14 Nov 2025 07.00 EST
Last modified on Fri 14 Nov 2025 10.39 EST
Members of Georgias election denial movement have claimed in recent weeks that the justice department is investigating debunked fraud claims in the state stemming from the 2020 election.
The development would be just the latest in a series of moves by Trump acolytes at the Department of Justice who are transforming the voting section of the agency from an office focused on protecting Americans voting rights to one that is in lockstep with an election denial movement that incessantly demands investigations and drastic reductions in access to the polls based on Donald Trumps lies about elections.
On 2 October, Republicans from the Georgia legislature invited several election deniers to speak at a hearing designed to help lawmakers decide whether to end the states membership in the Electronic Registration Information Center, or Eric, an organization that helps election officials remove ineligible voters from voter rolls.
Among those invited was Mark Davis, a political consultant and frequent voter registration challenger. Daviss presentation was titled Felony Residency Violations, and alleged that hundreds of thousands of Georgia voters may have voted illegally in recent elections because they had moved, but had voted in their former jurisdictions. On September 10th, I received a call from an investigator with the Department of Justice about these specific violations, Davis claimed. Neither Davis nor the justice department responded to requests for comment.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/nov/14/georgia-2020-elections-justice-department
Attilatheblond
(7,809 posts)The distractions will be getting weirder and weirder as he finds less wiggle room in the corner he has painted himself into.
wolfie001
(6,514 posts)They all know he's guilty. That's why they made up stories about Joe Biden. Bunch of sociopaths.
AverageOldGuy
(3,159 posts)From the OP:
In Virginia, if you move within the state but have not updated your address in voting records, you can vote in your old location up to 30 days after moving PROVIDED the voter fills out on the spot a new voter registration form with their new address and shows proof of the new address. Of course, if a voter shows up at his/her old precinct, says "I moved two weeks ago" but actually moved six weeks ago, there's no way to check. I suspect -- even if there is a bit of truth in the claim -- that what actually happened was voters moved, voted in their old precinct during the grace period (Georgia law probably has a grace period), and that's what happened.