FL GOP fires its own voter registration vendor for 'questionable' registrations

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CptObvious

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Mar 5, 2004
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Oh the ironing is delicious. Looks like FL Republicans FINALLY found some evidence of voter fraud, but from the wrong side.

http://news.yahoo.com/gop-fires-vendor-questionable-registrations-221750586--election.html

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans on Thursday fired a vendor suspected of submitting 108 questionable new voter registrations in Florida's Palm Beach County, ground zero for disputed ballots in 2000's presidential race.
The Republican Party of Florida used Virginia-based Strategic Allied Consulting to help register and turnout voters in Florida, one of a shrinking handful of states President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney are contesting. The Florida state party had paid the firm more than $1.3 million so far, and the Republican National Committee used the group for almost $3 million of work in Nevada, North Carolina, Colorado and Virginia.
"We have zero tolerance for any threat to the integrity of elections. When we were informed of an alleged incident we immediately cut all ties to the company," RNC Communications Director Sean Spicer said.
The state party similarly sought to distance itself from the firm and its main operative, Nathan Sproul.
"We immediately informed the Republican National Committee that we were terminating the contract with the voter-registration vendor we hired at their request because there is no place for voter-registration fraud in Florida," state Republican Party Executive Director Mike Grissom said in a statement.
Strategic Allied Consulting said the suspected forms came from one person and the company was cooperating with elections officials in Florida.
"Strategic has a zero-tolerance policy for breaking the law," said Fred Petti, a company attorney. "Accordingly, once we learned of the irregularities in Palm Beach County, we were able to trace all questionable cards to one individual and immediately terminated our working relationship with the individual in question."
The company did not identify the individual.
Polls show Obama increasing his lead over Romney in Florida, a hard-fought state that hosted the GOP's convention last month. If Romney were to lose Florida and its 29 electoral votes, he would have to sweep other battleground states of Ohio, Virginia, Wisconsin, Colorado, Iowa, Nevada and New Hampshire to win the White House.
Palm Beach County Elections Supervisor Susan Bucher's staff noticed signatures that looked alike and incomplete forms submitted on Sept. 5 by Strategic Allied Consulting. Bucher met with prosecutors on Monday to request an investigation.
Palm Beach County was at the center of the ballot recount in 2000, with George W. Bush and Al Gore both contesting the results that seemed to give Reform Party nominee Pat Buchanan an unusually strong showing. Critics — and legions of attorneys — said the ballot design led many Gore supporters to cast votes for Buchanan.
The subsequent questions that arose about how ballots should be tabulated made their way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which settled the bitter contest in a 5-4 ruling barring a ballot recount. Bush won.
Sproul, a longtime GOP operative who leads Strategic Allied Consulting, previously worked for Romney's campaign through a separate firm, Lincoln Strategy Group. Romney spokeswoman Sarah Pompei says the campaign has not used Sproul since 2011, when the campaign was using Lincoln to collect signatures to get on primary ballots.
The deadline to register in Florida for Nov. 6's election is Oct. 9.
 

Schmide

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So they found a problem and dealt with it directly.

It's a little more than just finding a problem. It's using the same guy (George Sproul) over and over with a history of at the very least questionable actions. I mean this guy makes Acorn look angelic. Just google his name.

voterregpic.png


The real question is why they keep hiring this guy?

Edit:
Nbc update on the company.

http://firstread.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/27/14126789-rnc-cuts-ties-with-firm-over-voter-fraud-allegations?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

The funny thing is it's so blatant.

Just go search your local craigslist.

republican <- guilty
democrat
 
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Schmide

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Let's see, as soon as they heard from a credible source of illegal and unethical practices the Republicans fire the guy.

Compare that the Obama administration HHS secretary Sebelius who breaks the law and gets a pat on the back and gets sent out to campaign for Obama.
http://washingtonexaminer.com/sebel...ch-act-violation/article/2509096#.UGVOs65SR7g

Fucking hypocrites.

WTF does this have to do with voter fraud???

Quick Divert Divert the brand is in jeopardy.

BTW what you are doing is threadjacking.
 

monovillage

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WTF does this have to do with voter fraud???

Quick Divert Divert the brand is in jeopardy.

BTW what you are doing is threadjacking.

I thought your post had more to do with the moral and ethical practices of the Republican party so I compared their ethical stance of firing someone for wrongdoing as opposed to the unethical stance of HHS Secretary Sebelius and the Obama administration.
Since it's your thread I will stop posting in it.
 

CptObvious

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faux liberal outrage.

Nobody's outraged over this, just bemused. The whole 'widespread voter fraud' fiasco was started by Republicans and hasn't been as productive as they've hoped:

AP:
FLORIDA

Florida's search began after the state's Division of Elections said that as many as 180,000 registered voters weren't citizens. Like Colorado and other states, Florida relied on driver's license data showing that people on the rolls at one point showed proof of non-citizenship, such as a green card.

Florida eventually narrowed its list of suspected noncitizens to 2,600 and found that 207 of them weren't citizens, based on its use of the federal database called SAVE, or the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements. The system tracks who is a legal resident eligible to receive government benefits.

Of the 2,600 initially marked as possible noncitizens, about 38 percent were unaffiliated voters and 40 percent were Democrats, according to an analysis by The Miami Herald.

The state has more than 11.4 million registered voters, so the 207 amounts to .001 percent of the voter roll.

Florida Secretary of State Ken Detzner, a Republican, said in a statement that the initiative "is already proving to be a successful process to identify illegally registered voters," which he noted is crucial in a state where the 2000 presidential election was decided by 537 votes.
 
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