New Hampshire: Voter Fraud Questions Go Unanswered
Voter fraud is hard to demonstrate or debunk because few states investigate it. Consider New Hampshire, where the state’s Attorney General has dropped its review of thousands of questionable ballots due to a lack of manpower, according to the Concord Patch. “It was extremely burdensome and we basically couldn’t manage it,” Assistant Attorney General Brian Buonamano is quoted as saying. “There’s no staff to do those investigations.”
The story did not address White House adviser Stephen Miller’s recent widely challenged claim that Massachusetts voters are bused into New Hampshire to deliver Democrat votes. It does report that in 2016, thousands of so-called affidavit voters cast ballots without New Hampshire identification.
Any alleged or presumed fraud that occurred this last election year could have potentially played a role in altering the United States Senate. Last year, Republican Senator Kelly Ayotte lost her seat by 743 votes to Democrat Maggie Hassan.