The voter rolls of North Carolina have been removed from MarkMeadows due to an investigation into whether he illegally registered to vote in the 2020 presidential election.
According to NBC News, the Board of Elections in North Carolina removed Meadows from the list of voters on Monday after reviewing documentation that indicated he lived in Virginia and did not vote in the races for governor, attorney general and the state's legislature.
If a registered voter votes in another state's election, they are considered to have lost their residence in that state. It is not illegal for a person to vote in another state.
When contacted by NBC about his removal from the voter rolls in North Carolina, he had no comment.
After a New Yorker magazine article reported that a mobile home in North Carolina was where former Republican congressman MarkMeadows lived in September 2020, North Carolina authorities opened an investigation into possible voter fraud.
At the time, he was the chief of staff to the president. While working in the District of Columbia, Meadows could maintain his residence for the purpose of voting in North Carolina.
The New Yorker reported that the man who backed Trump's false claims of widespread ballot fraud did not own the mobile home.
He listed his move-in date for the following day at the mobile home when he registered to vote.
Lying on voter registration is a crime.
According to the Citizen-Times, the wife of the man is still registered to vote at the mobile home.
Macon County Republican voters interviewed by the Citizen-Times expressed skepticism about a powerful member of the president's staff living in a small home with a rusted roof.
A North Carolina woman who said she had been prosecuted for voting while on criminal parole was the subject of an article published by The Citizen-Times. The way they prosecuted me should be dealt with by that woman.