NC Court Confirms Non-Residents Voted in Federal Elections — But Sure, Election Integrity Is a 'Conspiracy Theory'

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NC Court Confirms Non-Residents Voted in Federal Elections — But Sure, Election Integrity Is a 'Conspiracy Theory'

A Wake County Superior Court just ruled that North Carolina violated its own laws by letting non-residents cast ballots in federal elections — and the collective silence from the "election integrity is fine, you paranoid rubes" crowd is deafening. The ruling, handed down Tuesday, is a clean win for the RNC and a gut punch to everyone who spent the last several years calling voter roll concerns a right-wing fever dream.

But don't worry. We're sure CNN will get right on this.

Here's what happened. The North Carolina Supreme Court had already ruled last year that non-residents couldn't vote in state elections. Pretty straightforward — if you don't live here, you don't get to pick our governor. But somehow, some way, North Carolina's election officials just… forgot to apply that same standard to federal elections. People who had no business voting for U.S. senators and congressmen were doing exactly that, and the state shrugged.

The RNC took them to court. And the RNC won.

RNC Chairman Joe Gruters didn't mince words. "This is a clear win for fair and lawful elections," Gruters said. "The court upheld the North Carolina Constitution and made clear that only North Carolina residents can vote in the state. The RNC will keep fighting to ensure only eligible citizens can vote."

Now, before the fact-checkers swarm in with their little "context" boxes — yes, the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act still applies. U.S. citizens who previously lived in North Carolina and are currently serving overseas can still vote. Nobody's taking ballots away from deployed Marines. This ruling targets people who simply don't live in the state and were voting anyway because nobody bothered to stop them.

That's the part that should make your blood boil. It wasn't some shadowy conspiracy. It was bureaucratic negligence — or maybe something worse. The state Supreme Court said non-residents can't vote in state races. The state's election apparatus heard that ruling and apparently decided federal races were a different animal. They weren't. The Wake County Superior Court just made that crystal clear.

For years we were told that concerns about voter rolls were overblown, that the system was airtight, that demanding basic eligibility verification was tantamount to "suppression." Now a court has confirmed what election integrity advocates have been screaming from the rooftops: non-residents were casting ballots in federal elections, and the state let it happen.

As Just The News first reported, North Carolina had every legal basis to fix this after the state Supreme Court ruling. They just didn't. Whether that was incompetence or something more deliberate is a question worth asking — loudly.

The media won't cover this. They never do when the evidence runs against their narrative. But the court record doesn't care about narrative. It cares about law. And the law just said what we already knew: if you don't live in North Carolina, you don't get to vote in North Carolina. Period.

Funny how "defending democracy" never seems to include enforcing the actual rules of democracy.


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