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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy Did Mark Meadows Register to Vote at an Address Where He Did Not Reside?
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Charles Bethea
@charlesbethea
Scoop: Mark Meadows's voter registration has been linked, since the fall of 2020, to a mobile home in Scaly Mountain, North Carolina. Meadows has never owned the mobile home. He has apparently never slept there, either. This could constitute voter fraud.
newyorker.com
Why Did Mark Meadows Register to Vote at an Address Where He Did Not Reside?
In September, 2020, Donald Trumps then chief of staff claimed to live in a mobile home in North Carolina.
7:57 AM · Mar 6, 2022
Charles Bethea
@charlesbethea
Scoop: Mark Meadows's voter registration has been linked, since the fall of 2020, to a mobile home in Scaly Mountain, North Carolina. Meadows has never owned the mobile home. He has apparently never slept there, either. This could constitute voter fraud.
newyorker.com
Why Did Mark Meadows Register to Vote at an Address Where He Did Not Reside?
In September, 2020, Donald Trumps then chief of staff claimed to live in a mobile home in North Carolina.
7:57 AM · Mar 6, 2022
https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/why-did-mark-meadows-register-to-vote-at-an-address-where-he-did-not-reside
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https://archive.ph/ErrsE
Mark Meadows, who grew up in Florida, moved to North Carolina in the nineteen-eighties and opened Aunt Ds, a sandwich shop in Highlands. He later sold the restaurant and started a real-estate company with a line in vacation properties. (He showed a few to my parents, in the nineties.) He became active in local Republican politics, and, in 2012, ran for Congress and won, going on to represent North Carolinas Eleventh District until March, 2020, when he resigned the seat to become President Donald Trumps chief of staff. Earlier that month, he sold his twenty-two-hundred-square-foot home in Sapphire. He and his wife, Debbie, also had a condo in Virginia, near Washington, D.C. But, as the summer passed and the election neared, Meadows had not yet purchased a new residence in what had been his home state. On September 19th, about three weeks before North Carolinas voter-registration deadline for the general election, Meadows filed his paperwork. On a line that asked for his residential addresswhere you physically live, the form instructsMeadows wrote down the address of a fourteen-by-sixty-two-foot mobile home in Scaly Mountain. He listed his move-in date for this address as the following day, September 20th.
Meadows does not own this property and never has. It is not clear that he has ever spent a single night there. (He did not respond to a request for comment.) The previous owner, who asked that we not use her name, now lives in Florida. That was just a summer home, she told me, when I called her up the other day. She seemed surprised to learn that the residence was listed on the Meadowses forms. The property sits in the southern Appalachian mountains, at about four thousand feet, in the bend of a quiet road above a creek in Macon County. She and her husband bought it in 1985. Wed come up there for three to four months when my husband was living, she said. Her husband died several years ago, and the house sat mostly unused for some time afterward, she said, because she had nobody to go up there with anymore.
She only rented it out twice, she told me. The first renter, she said, was Debbie Meadows, who, according to the former owner, reserved the house for two months at some point within the past few yearsshe couldnt remember exactly whenbut only spent one or two nights there. The Meadowses kids had visited the place, too, she said. The former owner was in Florida at the time, but her neighbors, the Talleys, whom she described as friends of the Meadowses, debriefed her later. As for Mark Meadows, she said, He did not come. Hes never spent a night in there.
The former owner had put the mobile home on the market in the summer of 2020, but the Meadowses never expressed an interest in buying it, she said. The one other time she rented the place out, it was to someone who had: a retail manager at Lowes named Ken Abele, who bought the mobile home in August of the following year. Abele said that hed heard that the Meadows family stayed there in the fall of 2020, when they were in the area for a Trump rally, because nearby hotels were scarce. The realtor who facilitated his purchase, whom I was unable to reach before we went to press, told him this, he said, and the realtor had heard it from the Talleys. It struck him as odd. Ive made a lot of improvements, Abele said, of the mobile home. But when I got it, it was not the kind of place youd think the chief of staff of the President would be staying. I asked him what he made of Meadows listing the property as his place of residence on his voter-registration form. Thats weird that he would do that, he said. Really weird.
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Why Did Mark Meadows Register to Vote at an Address Where He Did Not Reside? (Original Post)
Nevilledog
Mar 2022
OP
Sure. I'll put a little sticky note on the front of the DOJ's contempt referral for Meadows.
Nevilledog
Mar 2022
#7
Chainfire
(17,308 posts)1. It can't be voter fraud. He is a Republican...
Turbineguy
(37,212 posts)2. That mobile home
needs to be charged with voter fraud!
Biophilic
(3,487 posts)3. Ya think. If it's not voter fraud I can't think of what it is. nt
bearsfootball516
(6,369 posts)4. Lock him up, right?
Nevilledog
(50,687 posts)7. Sure. I'll put a little sticky note on the front of the DOJ's contempt referral for Meadows.
bearsfootball516
(6,369 posts)9. I'll make sure to leave a voicemail with the receptionist.
bucolic_frolic
(42,678 posts)5. Check the visitor logs
and AirBnb's.
Siwsan
(26,177 posts)6. OBVIOUSLY that mobile home has stolen his identity!!
Hate it when that happens, don't you?
halfulglas
(1,654 posts)8. Who would charge voter fraud? State of North Carolina? Federal?
This can't be the first time a Republican has done something like this. And yet so many Republican states try very hard to stop college students having a choice to vote from their college campuses or their parents' home.
Chainfire
(17,308 posts)10. If your question was "who will" instead of "who would" the answer is simple.
No one. He is of the class that is too big to fall. There is a lot of that going around.
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(107,111 posts)11. K&R
LetMyPeopleVote
(144,005 posts)12. Meadows is committing voter fraud
L. Coyote
(51,129 posts)13. NY Times has picked up the story