More Voter Registration Shenanigans: Indianapolis Has 105% Of Its Population Registered To Vote

Does ACORN have an office in Indianapolis? You know they do.

According to STATSIndiana, In 2007, Indianapolis/Marion County had an estimated population of 876,804. Of that number 232,607 were below 18 years of age, for a total of 644,197 people in Marion County/Indianapolis 18 or over and thus eligible to vote. (Indiana allows felons to vote as long as they are not incarcerated).

So we have 644,197 people eligible to be registered in Marion County/Indianapolis, and 677,401 people registered. Congratulations go to Indianapolis for having 105% of its residents registered!

Across the nation voter registration irregularities are coming to light. Many of these irregularities involving the former employer, ACORN, of one of our Presidential candidates, Barack Obama. Now it comes to light that Obama’s campaign has paid ACORN over $800,000 for “get out the vote” efforts so far this campaign season.

At some point, someone is going to have to look into this stuff.

Did you enjoy this post? Why not leave a comment below and continue the conversation, or subscribe to my feed and get articles like this delivered automatically to your feed reader.

Comments

What is STATSIndiana? I know the estimated population of the Metro area is 1.3 million. I’m not doubting the ACORN is responsible for cooking up false voters and bringing in illegals with fake voter cards, but I think we need to have the National Guard at our election booths on Tues Nov 4. Let them and the TSA check IDs and voter registrations. So what if it costs another trillion. The govt is giving handouts like it is actually their money! We’re in such trouble another trillion is literally like handing over a couple french fries to your buddy.

STATSIndiana info: http://www.stats.indiana.edu/about.asp
Current support comes from the State of Indiana and the Indiana Department of Workforce Development. Working with the Governor’s Office and the IUPUI Center for Urban Policy and the Environment, STATS Indiana has added significantly to its databases and ability to meet researchers’ and policy analysts’ need for better data to inform issues and decisions.

I agree re: the National Guard, however… I think the damage may already be done – just like in Ohio with absentee ballots…

Leave a comment

(required)

(required)


If you are human, count objects:
Enable this image please
I see:
- +
- +
- +
Ironclad CAPTCHA (Security Stronghold)