The New Yorker reports:
On September 19th, about three weeks before North Carolina’s voter-registration deadline for the general election, Meadows filed his paperwork.
On a line that asked for his residential address—“where you physically live,” the form instructs—Meadows 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.
Read the full article.
If a person of color submitted an illegal voter registration, they would be behind bars. Not so for Mark Meadows. What is different? ? https://t.co/KFvR8uBK10
— Michael McDonald (@ElectProject) March 6, 2022
For all of his efforts to prove voter fraud in the 2020 election, former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows may have just needed to look at his front door https://t.co/i9Mz4PvBXZ
— The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) March 6, 2022