АНУ-ын Хууль зүйн яам сонгуулийн ажилтнуудад анхааруулга хүргүүллээ

Published:

Энэхүү мэдээ, нийтлэлийг хиймэл оюун боловсруулав.

АНУ-ын Хууль зүйн яамны Иргэний эрхийн хэлтсийн туслах ерөнхий прокурор Хармит Диллон сонгуулийн үеэр иргэн бус хүмүүсийг санал хураалтад оролцуулсан эсвэл сонгогчдын нэрсийн жагсаалтад бүртгэлтэй хэвээр үлдээсэн тохиолдолд муж улсын сонгуулийн албаны хүмүүст эрүүгийн хариуцлага тооцох боломжтойг анхааруулсан захидал илгээжээ. Энэхүү албан бичгийг АНУ-ын 50 муж улсын удирдлагуудад хүргүүлсэн бөгөөд сонгуулийн шударга байдлыг хангах, холбооны хуулийн хэрэгжилтийг чангатгах зорилготой гэж тайлбарлаж байна.

Тус яамнаас сонгуулийн нэрсийн жагсаалтыг цэвэрлэх, иргэн бус хүмүүсийг санал хураалтаас хасах шаардлагыг тавьж байгаа боловч олон муж улсын зүгээс үүнийг эсэргүүцэж байна. Тухайлбал, Юта муж улсын дэд захирагч Дейдре Хендерсон болон Аризона муж улсын Төрийн нарийн бичгийн дарга Адриан Фонтес нар холбооны засгийн газрын энэхүү шаардлага нь хууль бус бөгөөд сонгуулийн ажилтнуудыг дарамталсан шинжтэй хэмээн мэдэгджээ. Муж улсуудын сонгуулийн байгууллагууд холбооны хууль болон өөрсдийн муж улсын хууль тогтоомжийн дагуу ажиллаж байгаа гэдгээ онцлов.

Үүний зэрэгцээ, АНУ-ын Хууль зүйн яам ирэх сонгуулийн улирлын үеэр Аризона, Мичиган, Массачусетс, Миннесота, Нью-Хэмпшир болон Виржиниа зэрэг зургаан муж улсын 15 бүс нутагт сонгуулийн хяналт тавихаар болсноо зарласан байна. Албаны хүмүүсийн зүгээс энэ нь өмнөх жилүүдийн адил хэвийн үйл ажиллагаа гэж мэдэгдсэн ч муж улсуудын нэрсийн жагсаалтыг шаардах ажиллагаа нь шүүхийн маргаан дагуулсан хэвээр байна. АНУ-ын засаг захиргаа “SAVE America Act” хуулийн төслийг дэмжиж, шинэ сонгогчдоос иргэншлээ нотлох баримт шаардах нь зүйтэй гэж үзэж байгаа юм.

Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах

↓Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓

<![CDATA[{"className":"sc-1ge0fwe-0","newsletterData":{"pianoFieldName":"receiveInsideWashingtonNews","regTitle":"Inside Washington","subscriptionGroup":"inside_washington","subscriptionGroupId":"af764e04-87eb-45e6-a84b-a7455ba70a1e","type":"inside_washington","pathPrefix":"/news/world/americas/us-politics","associatedAuthors":["Eric Garcia","John Bowden"],"title":"Sign up for the daily Inside Washington email for exclusive US coverage and analysis sent to your inbox","mobileTitle":"Get our free Inside Washington email","imageSrc":"https://static.independent.co.uk/static-assets/images/newsletters/insideWashington1_1.png","label":"I would like to receive morning headlines Monday – Friday plus breaking news alerts by email“,”newsletterKey”:”receiveInsideWashington”,”regSourceSection”:”US politics”,”regSourceNewsletter”:”NSC”},”isClimate”:false}]]>

A top Trump official has warned state election leaders that they could face criminal charges if they knowingly permit noncitizens to vote or remain on voter rolls — marking the administration’s latest attempt to police election integrity.

On Tuesday, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon dispatched letters to officials in all 50 states, invoking statutes that have long existed but are being pointed to with renewed urgency.

“Any election officer, including the chief election officer of the state, who knowingly retains noncitizens on the state’s [state voter registration list] or facilitates noncitizens in receiving and casting ballots could be subject to criminal liability,” Dhillon wrote in letters to officials from Maine, Michigan and Arizona, that were obtained by CBS News.

cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “mpu1”, renderedAtParagraph: 3’); }]]>

cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “mpu1”, injectedAtParagraph: 3’); }]]>

“We encourage you to contact us to discuss what steps your state should take to maintain clean voter lists as required by law,” added Dhillon.

The letters are part of a broad effort by the Trump administration to tighten election rules over concerns about voter fraud — an issue that numerous reviews have found to be vanishingly rare.

Harmeet Dhillon, the assistant attorney general for civil rights, (pictured center) sent letters threatening criminal action against state election officials if they knowingly permit non-citizens to vote
Harmeet Dhillon, the assistant attorney general for civil rights, (pictured center) sent letters threatening criminal action against state election officials if they knowingly permit non-citizens to vote (Getty Images)

The president has pressed Congress to pass the SAVE America Act, which would require new voters to show proof of citizenship.

cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “taboola-carousel-thumbnails”, injectedAtParagraph: 6’); }]]>

He has also declined to rule out deploying National Guard troops or ICE agents to polling places, while baselessly claiming that Democratic-led states are engaged in “BIG cheating.” For years, Trump has asserted without evidence that widespread voter fraud by noncitizens benefits Democrats.

The Independent has contacted the Justice Department for comment.

A DOJ spokesperson told CBS News: “The Department sent these letters to all 50 states and the District of Columbia, asking for voluntary compliance in a timely manner with their obligations under federal law to ensure only citizens vote in federal elections.”

cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “mpu2”, renderedAtParagraph: 8’); }]]>

cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “mpu2”, injectedAtParagraph: 8’); }]]>

The letters arrived as the DOJ remains entangled in litigation with numerous states in a bid to compel them to hand over their uncensored voter rolls. The Civil Rights Division says the records would be used by the department to enforce compliance with federal law, though officials have also conceded the data will be shared with the Department of Homeland Security to check for noncitizen voters.

To date, the administration has come up short, racking up 11 defeats at the district court level, according to CBS News.

President Trump, who has repeatedly and baselessly insisted that US elections are riddled with widespread fraud, has pushed lawmakers to pass the SAVE America Act, which would require new voters to show proof of citizenship. Last month, he met with GOP lawmakers on Capitol Hill, urging them to get it passed
President Trump, who has repeatedly and baselessly insisted that US elections are riddled with widespread fraud, has pushed lawmakers to pass the SAVE America Act, which would require new voters to show proof of citizenship. Last month, he met with GOP lawmakers on Capitol Hill, urging them to get it passed (Getty Images)

Some state officials have openly balked at the federal government’s overtures.

Utah Lieutenant Governor Deidre Henderson, a Republican and the state’s top election official, expressed concern in a post on social media.

cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “mpu3”, renderedAtParagraph: 10’); }]]>

cookie.trim() === ‘__DEBUG__=true’)) { console.log(‘Ad logs: “mpu3”, injectedAtParagraph: 11’); }]]>

“Got another love letter this morning from the DOJ sprinkled throughout with threats of criminal prosecution,” Henderson wrote, according to The New York Times, which reported that the letter highlighted multiple federal election laws over the span of seven pages.

“I’m sure I’m not the only chief election officer of a state who is being targeted for following state and federal laws by resisting DOJ’s demands for private voter data that have thus far been ruled illegal by at least a dozen courts,” she continued. “This is truly bizarre behavior by the federal agency that is supposed to be protecting civil rights.”

Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes, a Democrat, also issued a lengthy response defending his state’s election measures.

“It is insulting to insinuate that the good people at our county recorders’ offices across the state are not doing their jobs correctly,” Fontes said in a statement. “Arizona election officials have always worked to ensure that only eligible citizens are registered to vote, and we will continue following Arizona law—not directions that come from political rhetoric or intimidation.”

Also on Tuesday, Dhillon announced that the Civil Rights Division would send election monitors to 15 jurisdictions across six states during the “upcoming primary season.”

The states are Arizona, Michigan, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire and Virginia — four of which voted for former Vice President Kamala Harris in 2024.

Dhillon emphasized that the move is routine, noting that the Biden administration sent monitors to nine jurisdictions in 2022.

- Зар сурталчилгаа -

Та юу гэж бодож байна?

Сэтгэгдлээ оруулна уу!
Please enter your name here

MFC.mn сайтад сэтгэгдэл оруулахад анхаарах зүйлс

Холбоотой

spot_img

Шинэ

spot_img