Add 52 U.S. Code § 30127 Election Reform
In every election that has a candidate for Congress, a candidate to be an elector for President, a Candidate for President, or a candidate for delegate for a national pollical party convention who has nominated a candidate for President who received at least one electoral vote in the in the most recent previous Presidential election. The following must be done in all elections or primaries:
Subsection 1) Each state shall by state law set up a system to enroll voters via voter registration and methods to count the votes. Candidates in a manner set by state law, may have watchers: at poll sites, early voting sites, when absentee ballots are opened, and when any votes are counted. Paper ballots shall be used but they may be counted by machine. Write in votes shall always be allowed including name stamps, and/or name stickers may be used as write in votes. The Federal Election Commission shall obtain every October, from every state an electronic copy of that state’s voter registration rolls. Federal Election Commission shall from other sources obtain information to keep the voter registration rolls current and accurate, including but not limited to, removing non-citizens from rolls, removing those who have died from rolls, removing those who have not voted in the last five years from the rolls, correcting those who filed a change of address filed with the post office, removing duplicates from rolls, making sure each voter is only enrolled at one address, removing those that lack a valid home address, and keeping a current list of nursing home, or assisted living residents; then each January and July that information shall be sent to the states, to update voter registration rolls; whenever the voter roll is updated a letter shall be mailed, by the state, to the voter’s old address and new address on file to make sure it was not updated in error. The Secretary of the Department of the Interior shall provide staff to help the Federal Election Commission update the voter rolls. A new voter registration shall not take effect until ten days after the registration is completed online, or ten days after it is delivered to the state agency that enrolls voters. All elections winners shall be by plurality vote; ranked-choice voting shall not be allowed in a primary election or general election. The department of justice, Candidates on the ballot in that state and/or pollical party officers in that state and/or the United States attorney in the district effected may file suit in the United States District Court having jurisdiction to keep voter registration rolls current and accurate; and/or ensure all parts of this section are followed; the United States District Court having jurisdiction may issue court orders and injunctions to enforce this act.
Subsection 2) Each voter shall be assigned to only one polling site on Election Day or Primary Day and may only vote at that site. The ballots must be kept for at least two years after the day they were cast. A photo Identification from the list in this section shall be shown to vote. The voter roll shall be updated to show who voted. Each polling place will provide privacy screens so no can see how a voter is voting.
Subsection 3) Early Voting sites may be allowed by state law. Early voting must end at least one full day before the election. At the end of each early voting day the vote counts including write in votes shall posted by the Election Inspectors on that each county board of elections website and all ballots that were cast shall be sealed in a box(es) with the Election Inspectors signing the seal and transport the boxes to a safe equipped with monitored a security system provided by that county’s board of elections; the ballots must be kept for at least two years after the day they were cast. A photo Identification from the list in this section shall be shown to vote. The voter roll shall be updated to show who voted. Early Voting sites will provide privacy screens so no can see how a voter is voting.
Subsection 4) Absentee ballots
A. An Absentee ballot may be requested at least sixty days, before the vote; the voter shall sign an oath or affirmation either in ink or electronically stating the reason, they are unable to vote at a polling place or early voting site(s) and send a photo copy of their photo Identification; the Identification must be from the list acceptable under this section; the reason given must be on a list of acceptable reasons under state law, or a letter must sent to the voter denying the request for an absentee ballot.
B. The Absentee ballot must be mailed, by the appropriate board of elections to the address the voter is enrolled at on the voter rolls(unless the voter is on active duty in the United States military then the military address shall be used), with a privacy envelope, an addressed return envelope, and instructions.
Except when absentee ballots are to be sent to nursing home, or assisted living residence, they must be brought in person to each voter by at least three election inspectors who shall wait up to seven minutes for the vote to be cast; if not cast within the time limit it shall be marked void. Each cast ballot shall be sealed in the envelopes and signed and dated (with the current date) by the voter, with a copy of the voter’s photo Identification; the election inspectors shall take all the sealed envelopes; add postage if needed, and while at least three election inspectors watch all the Absentee ballots envelopes shall mailed at a post office, the same day they are cast.
C. The privacy envelope shall have no identifying information on it but it may contain the polling station address, the voter would have voted at had they voted in person. The return envelope shall have the address to be delivered on the front, and on the back the voters name and a place for the voters’ signature; while the voter registration number may be on the back, no information about any party the voter is enrolled in may be included.
D. The cast ballot must be inserted in the privacy envelope and then sealed, next the privacy envelope shall be inserted in the return envelope, with a copy of the voter’s photo Identification and sealed, the voter must sign and date (with the current date) the return envelope in the spot provided, add postage and mail via United States mail. Absentee ballots must be returned by United States mail and be received by the date of the vote.
E. Any Absentee ballot not returned by United States mail, shall be void and not counted. Any Absentee ballot where the signature on the return envelope does not match the one on file with the board of elections shall be void and not counted; any Absentee ballot that was not inserted in a privacy envelope within the return envelope or date written on the return envelope shall be void and not counted, any Absentee ballot returned without a copy of the voter’s photo Identification shall be void and not counted. if a person votes in person and by Absentee ballot, that Absentee ballot shall be void and not counted; if an Absentee ballot is void a post card, or letter sent by United States mail at that board of elections’ expense shall be mailed to the voter to inform the voter why their ballot was not counted. Absentee ballots for those on active duty in the United States military shall be mailed to voter’s military address rather than their enrolled voter address and the returned ballots must be received, by the appropriate county board of elections, on or before election day, or on or before primary day to be counted. All Absentee ballots shall not be opened and/or start being counted by the appropriate county board of elections inspectors, and Candidate inspectors, until noon on the day after the election in a manner set by state law and this section. An absentee ballot opened early, not opened in the presence of election inspectors, or not containing a copy of the person’s photo Identification shall be considered fraudulent. The Identification numbers of all photo Identifications will be recorded and added to the voter roll for all voters whose Absentee ballots votes were counted. The ballots shall be kept for at least two years after the day they were cast. Candidates are allowed to have watchers at the absentee ballot opening and counting site, in a manner set by state law.
Subsection 5) Fraud in votes cast in an election shall mean a vote cast in any of the following ways: the voter is not a living United States citizen who attained the age of 18 years by election day or primary day; the voter is not a registered voter with a valid address of residence on the voter rolls; the voter voted at the wrong the location; the voter has cast votes at more than one location, in that election; the voter failed to produce a photo Identification as required, but was allowed to vote at a polling place or early voting location; the voter voted on more than one counted absentee ballot; counted absentee ballot was not received by United States mail; cast ballots have been altered; cast ballots have been lost; affidavit ballot was not marked affidavit; copy of photo Identification returned with absentee ballot does not match Identification on file; copy of photo Identification is not from the list in this section; same Identification is returned with more than one absentee ballot; or another reason set by state law. Major voting fraud is defined for this section as any of the following: more votes were cast for any race than the number of voters that voted that day at that polling place or that early voting site; more votes were cast for any race by absentee ballot than the number of absentee ballots returned by mail; more than 1 out every 200 counted absentee ballots are fraudulent; more than 1 out every 200 of the votes counted at a Polling place are fraudulent; more than 1 out every 200 of the votes counted an early voting location on the same day are fraudulent; more than 1 out of every 500 counted ballots in a county were not cast in the four allowed ways: at a polling place, at an early voting location, via a mailed affidavit ballot, or via a mailed absentee ballot; an early voting site failed to post its vote counts on the required website in a timely manner; or another reason set by state law. Affidavit ballots may be obtained from a polling place, by a voter whose registration to vote is in dispute; an affidavit ballot shall be mailed via certified mail by the voter in a manner set by law, with envelopes set up with the identical method as absentee ballots, and shall be marked affidavit on the outside envelope and on the ballot; if received by the appropriate county board of elections within seven days of the election, and if found to be valid according to law, affidavit ballots shall be counted, otherwise a post card, or letter sent by United States mail at that board of elections’ expense shall be sent to the voter to inform the voter why their ballot was not counted.
Subsection 6) When there is major voting fraud in the votes that have been counted, or ballots are not being held for the required two years, Candidates on the ballot in that state and/or pollical party officers in that state and/or the United States attorney in the district effected, may file suit in the United States District Court having jurisdiction. If the Court finds major voting fraud it shall void all the votes cast at the polling place(s), where major voting fraud occurred, and/or void all the counted absentee ballots in a county where major voting fraud occurred in absentee ballots, and/or void all the votes cast at the early voting site(s) on the day the major voting fraud occurred, and remove those votes from the election totals. If within a county the absentee ballots have been voided, or votes from two or more polling places have been voided and/or two or more early voting sites have been voided and/or ballots are not being held for the required two years; the United States District Court having jurisdiction shall appoint a special master to take office within 60 days, to oversee United States, state and local voting and empower the special master to appoint additional election inspectors to all places, votes are cast or counted or absentee ballots are opened, in that county, at that county’s expense for the next six years, to ensure citizens’ rights to free and fair elections are enforced. The special master shall see that the rules of this section are enforced for all United States, state and local elections during that time. Should major fraud continue during a special master term, at the end of that special master term; the court shall appoint a new person special master for another six years. The Special master may petition United States District Court that appointed the special master to appoint a special prosecutor with the same powers as an United States attorney, at the expense of the United States Department of Justice, for term of two years, to prosecute election related crimes. If more than five percent votes in any non-presidential election races have been voided, the United States District Court having jurisdiction shall order a special election for only those races to be run within 40 days if the major fraud occurred in a primary or special election, or if the major fraud occurred in the general election on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday between November 28th and December 15th of the same year. If enough uncounted absentee ballots that were delivered by United States mail, in a timely manner, to the appropriate board of elections to change the outcome of a race were lost or destroyed the United States District Court having jurisdiction shall order a special election for that race to be run within 40 days if the problem occurred in a primary or special election, or if the problem occurred in the general election on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday between November 28th and December 15th of the same year. If any state fails to schedule a Presidential primary by state law before January 1, of the Presidential election calendar year any candidate for President and/or pollical party officers in that state may file suit in any United States District Court to order the Primary to be scheduled.
Subsection 7) Acceptable forms of photo Identification for all parts of this section are: A driver’s license photo Identification card issued in that state, a non-driving photo Identification card issued in that state, a United States passport, a United States passport card, a United States Military Identification, a Medicare Insurance Identification card if it has the citizen’s photo on it, a Medicaid Insurance Identification issued card in that state if it has the citizen’s photo on it, or other government issued photo Identification card acceptable under state law that required a birth certificate or United States passport to obtain, as such as will be needed to cast a vote at a Polling place or early voting site or copy of the id enclosed with an absentee ballot outer return envelope.
For any religion such as branches of the Old Order Amish, that do not allow photos; if person without a valid photo Id obtains a letter written by their clergy supporting that photo is not allowed for that person; a fingerprint according to regulations instead of photo ID maybe used for that person to vote; they shall not vote by absentee ballot, and only vote at an assigned polling place or early voting sites, in their county, where their fingerprint shall be scanned prior to voting; a link to a copy of the clergy’s letter and link to the fingerprint shall be placed on their voter registration.
For all Medicare & Medicaid insurance cards issued after October 1, 2026, Medicare & Medicaid shall arrange to create plastic insurance card for each individual who have Medicare and/or Medicaid insurance coverage and are over age 16 with a photo of the covered individual face, the individuals date of birth on it, and list if they are a United States citizen. Each card will be for individual person; However, the names of minors under age 16, may be included under their parent’s/guardian’s name on the card. All such cards shall have a Medicare or Medicaid assigned id number on it; Social Security numbers shall not be used. The Medicare or Medicaid photo Identification cards maybe used for Identification even if the insurance coverage has lapsed until the card’s expiration date; if the person is a nursing home, and/or group home and/or other type of care home arrangements shall be made to have the photo taken at the home. Medicare and Medicaid should use the same photo whenever possible. The photo must be updated every eight years, and the card must have an expiration date on it set when the photo must be updated. Any pre-existing cards without a photo, or without expiration date on it, shall be replaced by July 1, 2036.
For this section Medicare means the program established under 79 Stat. 286 - Medicare Law - July 30, 1965 et seq. Medicaid means the program established under title XIX of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396 et seq.)
Subsection 8) Presidential Elections
A. In Presidential election calendar years all states shall hold a primary to elect delegates and alternate delegates, for national pollical conventions, for each pollical party that has nominated a candidate for President who received at least one electoral vote in the most recent previous Presidential election, other pollical parties may select their candidates’ delegates without primaries. The state primary election laws shall obey this section in holding their primary election. The state primary must be held before the twenty-second day of June, in a Presidential election calendar year; the exact date will be set by state law. The number of delegates and alternate delegates elected, for each pollical party. in each Congressional district shall be set by each pollical party’s bylaws which shall be filed with the Federal Election Commission. Any changes to National pollical party bylaws filed in a Presidential election year shall take effect on December 1st of that year. Delegates and alternate delegates shall be pledged to a candidate and shall be voted as a slate, in each Congressional district, with a vote for the candidate counting as vote for all the delegates and alternate delegates, in the slate, for that Congressional district. No one may vote in more than one pollical party’s Presidential primary in a calendar year.
B. For each pollical party that has nominated a candidate for President who received at least one electoral vote in the most recent previous Presidential election, shall hold a national convention, before the first day of August in Presidential election calendar years. These national pollical party conventions shall meet and nominate their candidates for President and Vice President according to their bylaws which shall state the minimum number of votes needed to be nominated; which are filed with the Federal Election Commission; delegates must vote on the first two ballots for the Presidential candidate they are pledged to unless a candidate withdraws from the race. While such political party conventions may have officials who are not delegates as set in their bylaws; only delegates and when needed alternate delegates elected in a primary may vote at the convention.
C. States shall include on their general election ballots the candidates’ electors for President and Vice President nominated by National pollical party conventions for each pollical party that has nominated a candidate for President who received at least one electoral vote in the most recent previous Presidential election, and for other candidates’ electors for candidates for President and Vice President that have met that states ballot requirements which must be set by state law, in an equitable manner not requiring, more than 15,000 signatures of registered voters in the state, or 5 percent of registered voters in the state, whichever is less, to be placed on the ballot.
D. All candidates for President, Vice President shall submit proof of natural born citizenship status to the Federal Election Commission within 30 days of becoming a candidate. Any challenge to candidates for President, Vice President residence and/or their electors’ residence, and/or qualifications to hold office, and/or President, Vice President candidates' natural born citizenship status, shall only be filed at the Federal Election Commission before the fifth day of August; it shall have 15 days to issue a decision; any appeals of decision or a failure to make a decision, may be appealed to United States Supreme Court. No one may be removed from the ballot after August twenty-fifth day of a Presidential election year for any reason other than death.
Subsection 9) Congressional Elections. In years when regular elections for Congress are held. A primary for reducing the number of candidates that will be on the general election ballot, or any special election ballot, may be held on date, and manner, set by state law but before the nineteenth day of August in the Congressional election years. Primary votes must be held according to the rules set in this section. Candidates shall meet that states ballot requirements which must be set by state law, in an equitable manner not requiring, for a seat in Congress’s house of representatives, more than 1,250 petition signatures of voters in their district, or five percent of the voters in their district, whichever is less, to get on the ballot; for a seat in Congress’s Senate, not requiring more than 15,000 signatures of registered voters in the state, or 5 percent of registered voters in the state, whichever is less, to be placed on the ballot. No one may be removed from the ballot after August twenty-fifth day of an election year for any reason other than death. No runoff elections can be set after the general election day in November.
Subsection 10) Lawfare
A. Lawfare is defined as the use of legal action(s) to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the use of legal systems or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent, and/or to deter a pollical opponent’s usage of their legal rights and/or bringing criminal charges against a pollical opponent for pollical reasons.
Pollical opponent is defined a person who is a declared candidate for United States elected office, State elected office, or local elected office, and/or has been a declared candidate for United States elected office, State elected office, or local elected office within the last ten years and/or is a lawyer who has or had a client who is or was declared for United States elected office, State elected office, or local elected office within the last ten years, and/or officers or board members of a pollical action committee and/or officers or board members of a state pollical committee and/or officers or board members of a pollical caucus; which has filed any required documents to raise campaign money and/or raise money to support or oppose pollical issue(s) with the Federal Election Commission, or an appropriate State or local agency.
Declared candidate is defined as a person who started raising money to run for United States elected office, State elected office, or local elected office and has filed any required documents to raise campaign money with the Federal Election Commission, or an appropriate State or local agency.
Criminal Lawfare is defined as the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent, and/or to deter a pollical opponent’s usage of their legal rights and/or bringing criminal charges against a pollical opponent for pollical reasons.
B. Should any person(s) bring a lawsuit to prevent or discourage a pollical opponent from running for public office and/or to remove a pollical opponent from the ballot, unless a court of competent jurisdiction finds they should be removed from the ballot, and/or fund or bring a suit to embarrass a pollical opponent and/or fund or bring a suit to bankrupt a pollical opponent and/or disbar a pollical opponent, as punishment for running or supporting a candidate and/or a disbar lawyer who has or had a declared candidate for pollical office as a client, or a pollical party as a client because they supported their client; they shall be guilty of lawfare and have repay triple all their pollical opponent legal fees, other damages, and court costs; if a corporation commits lawfare its officers and/or directors and/or lawyers are jointly and severally liable for these damages. The victim(s) of the lawfare actions above may file suit in the United States district court having jurisdiction where that person currently resides to obtain these damages and/or be restored to the bar and/or have the civil case dismissed; if they can prove based on a preponderance of evidence, that the civil case(s) were brought as result of lawfare.
C. A person who is a declared candidate for pollical office or has been a declared candidate for pollical office within the last ten years, or a lawyer who has or had a declared candidate for pollical office as a client, or a pollical party as a client, within the last ten years and/or officers or board members of a pollical action committee and/or officers or board members of a state pollical committee and/or officers or board members of a pollical caucus; which has filed any required documents to raise campaign money and/or raise money to support or oppose pollical issue(s) with the Federal Election Commission, or an appropriate State or local agency; and who is arrested, and/or indicted by any state grand jury, local grand jury in the United States, or indicted by a United States grand jury and/or is the victim of the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the victim of the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent; that person is entitled to petition the United States district court having jurisdiction where that person currently resides to review the arrest and/or indictment and/or the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent, to see if it is related to lawfare; their trial shall be delayed while the court holds a hearing to review the indictment and/or arrest and/or the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent.
If the court rules that lawfare did not occur the trial may proceed. However, if that United States district court finds the charges and/or actions based on a preponderance of evidence, were brought as a result of lawfare it shall dismiss the indictment and/or charges and/or legal action(s), with prejudice, and the court shall appoint a special prosecutor with the same powers as an United States attorney, at the expense of the United States Department of Justice, for term of four years, to empanel a grand jury(juries) in the United States court district(s) having jurisdiction where the indictment was obtained and/or arrest occurred and/or the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent occurred and/or is the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent occurred, to see if Criminal lawfare and/or any other United States’ election related laws were violated and if they were violated indict and prosecute the person(s) who violated United States’ laws. The court that appointed special prosecutor may for death, resignation, or just cause, replace the special prosecutor with another person to serve the remainer of the term. If for any reason these criminal case(s) are still pending at the end of the special prosecutor’s term; then the criminal case(s) shall transfer to the United States attorney office having jurisdiction.
Any person, is guilty of criminal lawfare a felony, if they bring in their official capacity, or caused to brought, criminal charges against a Pollical opponent without just cause, and/or unlawful/unjustly limit the criminal defense of a Pollical opponent and/or against a lawyer who has/had a declared candidate for pollical office as a client within the last ten years, or had/has a pollical party as a client within the last ten years, and/or unlawful/unjustly limit the criminal defense of such lawyer. A government official is guilty of criminal lawfare if that government official and/or their staff bring a lawsuit, or other legal action, found to be lawfare, at government expense to prevent or discourage a pollical opponent from running for public office.
The penalty for criminal lawfare shall be not less than three months and not more than two years imprisonment and/or a fine of up to twenty thousand dollars. The statute of limitations for both criminal lawfare and civil lawfare shall be five years from the date the last lawfare action occurred.
D. A civil lawfare action that occurred prior to this section taking effect, that a trial has not been held, or is still on appeal; the persons affected may still file suit in the United States district court having jurisdiction where that person currently resides to obtain these damages and/or be restored to the bar and/or have the civil case dismissed. A criminal lawfare case that occurred prior to this section taking effect, that a trial has not been held, or is still on appeal may still have those case(s) reviewed by the United States district court having jurisdiction where that person currently resides; but only actions that occurred after this section took effect may be prosecuted for criminal lawfare.
Subsection 11) In the State of Louisiana, a parish is a county. In the state of Alaska, a borough is a county. Local governments’ that act like a county in handling elections maybe treated as a county. The Federal Election Commission shall by regulation define what is a county in a state or part of a state, that lacks counties, define what is a county board of elections in a state or part of a state, that lacks them, and issue appropriate regulations to enforce this section. If appropriate regulations have not been adopted defining a county, a board of elections, and/or define Local governments’ that act like a county as stated above, the United States courts having jurisdiction shall issue court orders defining such, until such regulations are adopted. All elections held in the District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the United States Virgin Islands shall follow the rules in this section. This act is authorized under the fourteenth article of amendment, the ninth article of amendment, Article I Section 4, and Article IV Section 4 Republican Form of Government clause. Subsection 10 shall take effect as soon as the bill that contains it is signed by the President or becomes law; Subsection 8 shall take effect on first day of January, after the bill that contains it is signed by the President or becomes law; the rest of this section shall take effect ninety days after the bill that contains it is signed by the President or becomes law. If any part of this law is found to be unconstitutional by a court of competent jurisdiction the remainder shall remain in effect.
In every election that has a candidate for Congress, a candidate to be an elector for President, a Candidate for President, or a candidate for delegate for a national pollical party convention who has nominated a candidate for President who received at least one electoral vote in the in the most recent previous Presidential election. The following must be done in all elections or primaries:
Subsection 1) Each state shall by state law set up a system to enroll voters via voter registration and methods to count the votes. Candidates in a manner set by state law, may have watchers: at poll sites, early voting sites, when absentee ballots are opened, and when any votes are counted. Paper ballots shall be used but they may be counted by machine. Write in votes shall always be allowed including name stamps, and/or name stickers may be used as write in votes. The Federal Election Commission shall obtain every October, from every state an electronic copy of that state’s voter registration rolls. Federal Election Commission shall from other sources obtain information to keep the voter registration rolls current and accurate, including but not limited to, removing non-citizens from rolls, removing those who have died from rolls, removing those who have not voted in the last five years from the rolls, correcting those who filed a change of address filed with the post office, removing duplicates from rolls, making sure each voter is only enrolled at one address, removing those that lack a valid home address, and keeping a current list of nursing home, or assisted living residents; then each January and July that information shall be sent to the states, to update voter registration rolls; whenever the voter roll is updated a letter shall be mailed, by the state, to the voter’s old address and new address on file to make sure it was not updated in error. The Secretary of the Department of the Interior shall provide staff to help the Federal Election Commission update the voter rolls. A new voter registration shall not take effect until ten days after the registration is completed online, or ten days after it is delivered to the state agency that enrolls voters. All elections winners shall be by plurality vote; ranked-choice voting shall not be allowed in a primary election or general election. The department of justice, Candidates on the ballot in that state and/or pollical party officers in that state and/or the United States attorney in the district effected may file suit in the United States District Court having jurisdiction to keep voter registration rolls current and accurate; and/or ensure all parts of this section are followed; the United States District Court having jurisdiction may issue court orders and injunctions to enforce this act.
Subsection 2) Each voter shall be assigned to only one polling site on Election Day or Primary Day and may only vote at that site. The ballots must be kept for at least two years after the day they were cast. A photo Identification from the list in this section shall be shown to vote. The voter roll shall be updated to show who voted. Each polling place will provide privacy screens so no can see how a voter is voting.
Subsection 3) Early Voting sites may be allowed by state law. Early voting must end at least one full day before the election. At the end of each early voting day the vote counts including write in votes shall posted by the Election Inspectors on that each county board of elections website and all ballots that were cast shall be sealed in a box(es) with the Election Inspectors signing the seal and transport the boxes to a safe equipped with monitored a security system provided by that county’s board of elections; the ballots must be kept for at least two years after the day they were cast. A photo Identification from the list in this section shall be shown to vote. The voter roll shall be updated to show who voted. Early Voting sites will provide privacy screens so no can see how a voter is voting.
Subsection 4) Absentee ballots
A. An Absentee ballot may be requested at least sixty days, before the vote; the voter shall sign an oath or affirmation either in ink or electronically stating the reason, they are unable to vote at a polling place or early voting site(s) and send a photo copy of their photo Identification; the Identification must be from the list acceptable under this section; the reason given must be on a list of acceptable reasons under state law, or a letter must sent to the voter denying the request for an absentee ballot.
B. The Absentee ballot must be mailed, by the appropriate board of elections to the address the voter is enrolled at on the voter rolls(unless the voter is on active duty in the United States military then the military address shall be used), with a privacy envelope, an addressed return envelope, and instructions.
Except when absentee ballots are to be sent to nursing home, or assisted living residence, they must be brought in person to each voter by at least three election inspectors who shall wait up to seven minutes for the vote to be cast; if not cast within the time limit it shall be marked void. Each cast ballot shall be sealed in the envelopes and signed and dated (with the current date) by the voter, with a copy of the voter’s photo Identification; the election inspectors shall take all the sealed envelopes; add postage if needed, and while at least three election inspectors watch all the Absentee ballots envelopes shall mailed at a post office, the same day they are cast.
C. The privacy envelope shall have no identifying information on it but it may contain the polling station address, the voter would have voted at had they voted in person. The return envelope shall have the address to be delivered on the front, and on the back the voters name and a place for the voters’ signature; while the voter registration number may be on the back, no information about any party the voter is enrolled in may be included.
D. The cast ballot must be inserted in the privacy envelope and then sealed, next the privacy envelope shall be inserted in the return envelope, with a copy of the voter’s photo Identification and sealed, the voter must sign and date (with the current date) the return envelope in the spot provided, add postage and mail via United States mail. Absentee ballots must be returned by United States mail and be received by the date of the vote.
E. Any Absentee ballot not returned by United States mail, shall be void and not counted. Any Absentee ballot where the signature on the return envelope does not match the one on file with the board of elections shall be void and not counted; any Absentee ballot that was not inserted in a privacy envelope within the return envelope or date written on the return envelope shall be void and not counted, any Absentee ballot returned without a copy of the voter’s photo Identification shall be void and not counted. if a person votes in person and by Absentee ballot, that Absentee ballot shall be void and not counted; if an Absentee ballot is void a post card, or letter sent by United States mail at that board of elections’ expense shall be mailed to the voter to inform the voter why their ballot was not counted. Absentee ballots for those on active duty in the United States military shall be mailed to voter’s military address rather than their enrolled voter address and the returned ballots must be received, by the appropriate county board of elections, on or before election day, or on or before primary day to be counted. All Absentee ballots shall not be opened and/or start being counted by the appropriate county board of elections inspectors, and Candidate inspectors, until noon on the day after the election in a manner set by state law and this section. An absentee ballot opened early, not opened in the presence of election inspectors, or not containing a copy of the person’s photo Identification shall be considered fraudulent. The Identification numbers of all photo Identifications will be recorded and added to the voter roll for all voters whose Absentee ballots votes were counted. The ballots shall be kept for at least two years after the day they were cast. Candidates are allowed to have watchers at the absentee ballot opening and counting site, in a manner set by state law.
Subsection 5) Fraud in votes cast in an election shall mean a vote cast in any of the following ways: the voter is not a living United States citizen who attained the age of 18 years by election day or primary day; the voter is not a registered voter with a valid address of residence on the voter rolls; the voter voted at the wrong the location; the voter has cast votes at more than one location, in that election; the voter failed to produce a photo Identification as required, but was allowed to vote at a polling place or early voting location; the voter voted on more than one counted absentee ballot; counted absentee ballot was not received by United States mail; cast ballots have been altered; cast ballots have been lost; affidavit ballot was not marked affidavit; copy of photo Identification returned with absentee ballot does not match Identification on file; copy of photo Identification is not from the list in this section; same Identification is returned with more than one absentee ballot; or another reason set by state law. Major voting fraud is defined for this section as any of the following: more votes were cast for any race than the number of voters that voted that day at that polling place or that early voting site; more votes were cast for any race by absentee ballot than the number of absentee ballots returned by mail; more than 1 out every 200 counted absentee ballots are fraudulent; more than 1 out every 200 of the votes counted at a Polling place are fraudulent; more than 1 out every 200 of the votes counted an early voting location on the same day are fraudulent; more than 1 out of every 500 counted ballots in a county were not cast in the four allowed ways: at a polling place, at an early voting location, via a mailed affidavit ballot, or via a mailed absentee ballot; an early voting site failed to post its vote counts on the required website in a timely manner; or another reason set by state law. Affidavit ballots may be obtained from a polling place, by a voter whose registration to vote is in dispute; an affidavit ballot shall be mailed via certified mail by the voter in a manner set by law, with envelopes set up with the identical method as absentee ballots, and shall be marked affidavit on the outside envelope and on the ballot; if received by the appropriate county board of elections within seven days of the election, and if found to be valid according to law, affidavit ballots shall be counted, otherwise a post card, or letter sent by United States mail at that board of elections’ expense shall be sent to the voter to inform the voter why their ballot was not counted.
Subsection 6) When there is major voting fraud in the votes that have been counted, or ballots are not being held for the required two years, Candidates on the ballot in that state and/or pollical party officers in that state and/or the United States attorney in the district effected, may file suit in the United States District Court having jurisdiction. If the Court finds major voting fraud it shall void all the votes cast at the polling place(s), where major voting fraud occurred, and/or void all the counted absentee ballots in a county where major voting fraud occurred in absentee ballots, and/or void all the votes cast at the early voting site(s) on the day the major voting fraud occurred, and remove those votes from the election totals. If within a county the absentee ballots have been voided, or votes from two or more polling places have been voided and/or two or more early voting sites have been voided and/or ballots are not being held for the required two years; the United States District Court having jurisdiction shall appoint a special master to take office within 60 days, to oversee United States, state and local voting and empower the special master to appoint additional election inspectors to all places, votes are cast or counted or absentee ballots are opened, in that county, at that county’s expense for the next six years, to ensure citizens’ rights to free and fair elections are enforced. The special master shall see that the rules of this section are enforced for all United States, state and local elections during that time. Should major fraud continue during a special master term, at the end of that special master term; the court shall appoint a new person special master for another six years. The Special master may petition United States District Court that appointed the special master to appoint a special prosecutor with the same powers as an United States attorney, at the expense of the United States Department of Justice, for term of two years, to prosecute election related crimes. If more than five percent votes in any non-presidential election races have been voided, the United States District Court having jurisdiction shall order a special election for only those races to be run within 40 days if the major fraud occurred in a primary or special election, or if the major fraud occurred in the general election on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday between November 28th and December 15th of the same year. If enough uncounted absentee ballots that were delivered by United States mail, in a timely manner, to the appropriate board of elections to change the outcome of a race were lost or destroyed the United States District Court having jurisdiction shall order a special election for that race to be run within 40 days if the problem occurred in a primary or special election, or if the problem occurred in the general election on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday between November 28th and December 15th of the same year. If any state fails to schedule a Presidential primary by state law before January 1, of the Presidential election calendar year any candidate for President and/or pollical party officers in that state may file suit in any United States District Court to order the Primary to be scheduled.
Subsection 7) Acceptable forms of photo Identification for all parts of this section are: A driver’s license photo Identification card issued in that state, a non-driving photo Identification card issued in that state, a United States passport, a United States passport card, a United States Military Identification, a Medicare Insurance Identification card if it has the citizen’s photo on it, a Medicaid Insurance Identification issued card in that state if it has the citizen’s photo on it, or other government issued photo Identification card acceptable under state law that required a birth certificate or United States passport to obtain, as such as will be needed to cast a vote at a Polling place or early voting site or copy of the id enclosed with an absentee ballot outer return envelope.
For any religion such as branches of the Old Order Amish, that do not allow photos; if person without a valid photo Id obtains a letter written by their clergy supporting that photo is not allowed for that person; a fingerprint according to regulations instead of photo ID maybe used for that person to vote; they shall not vote by absentee ballot, and only vote at an assigned polling place or early voting sites, in their county, where their fingerprint shall be scanned prior to voting; a link to a copy of the clergy’s letter and link to the fingerprint shall be placed on their voter registration.
For all Medicare & Medicaid insurance cards issued after October 1, 2026, Medicare & Medicaid shall arrange to create plastic insurance card for each individual who have Medicare and/or Medicaid insurance coverage and are over age 16 with a photo of the covered individual face, the individuals date of birth on it, and list if they are a United States citizen. Each card will be for individual person; However, the names of minors under age 16, may be included under their parent’s/guardian’s name on the card. All such cards shall have a Medicare or Medicaid assigned id number on it; Social Security numbers shall not be used. The Medicare or Medicaid photo Identification cards maybe used for Identification even if the insurance coverage has lapsed until the card’s expiration date; if the person is a nursing home, and/or group home and/or other type of care home arrangements shall be made to have the photo taken at the home. Medicare and Medicaid should use the same photo whenever possible. The photo must be updated every eight years, and the card must have an expiration date on it set when the photo must be updated. Any pre-existing cards without a photo, or without expiration date on it, shall be replaced by July 1, 2036.
For this section Medicare means the program established under 79 Stat. 286 - Medicare Law - July 30, 1965 et seq. Medicaid means the program established under title XIX of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396 et seq.)
Subsection 8) Presidential Elections
A. In Presidential election calendar years all states shall hold a primary to elect delegates and alternate delegates, for national pollical conventions, for each pollical party that has nominated a candidate for President who received at least one electoral vote in the most recent previous Presidential election, other pollical parties may select their candidates’ delegates without primaries. The state primary election laws shall obey this section in holding their primary election. The state primary must be held before the twenty-second day of June, in a Presidential election calendar year; the exact date will be set by state law. The number of delegates and alternate delegates elected, for each pollical party. in each Congressional district shall be set by each pollical party’s bylaws which shall be filed with the Federal Election Commission. Any changes to National pollical party bylaws filed in a Presidential election year shall take effect on December 1st of that year. Delegates and alternate delegates shall be pledged to a candidate and shall be voted as a slate, in each Congressional district, with a vote for the candidate counting as vote for all the delegates and alternate delegates, in the slate, for that Congressional district. No one may vote in more than one pollical party’s Presidential primary in a calendar year.
B. For each pollical party that has nominated a candidate for President who received at least one electoral vote in the most recent previous Presidential election, shall hold a national convention, before the first day of August in Presidential election calendar years. These national pollical party conventions shall meet and nominate their candidates for President and Vice President according to their bylaws which shall state the minimum number of votes needed to be nominated; which are filed with the Federal Election Commission; delegates must vote on the first two ballots for the Presidential candidate they are pledged to unless a candidate withdraws from the race. While such political party conventions may have officials who are not delegates as set in their bylaws; only delegates and when needed alternate delegates elected in a primary may vote at the convention.
C. States shall include on their general election ballots the candidates’ electors for President and Vice President nominated by National pollical party conventions for each pollical party that has nominated a candidate for President who received at least one electoral vote in the most recent previous Presidential election, and for other candidates’ electors for candidates for President and Vice President that have met that states ballot requirements which must be set by state law, in an equitable manner not requiring, more than 15,000 signatures of registered voters in the state, or 5 percent of registered voters in the state, whichever is less, to be placed on the ballot.
D. All candidates for President, Vice President shall submit proof of natural born citizenship status to the Federal Election Commission within 30 days of becoming a candidate. Any challenge to candidates for President, Vice President residence and/or their electors’ residence, and/or qualifications to hold office, and/or President, Vice President candidates' natural born citizenship status, shall only be filed at the Federal Election Commission before the fifth day of August; it shall have 15 days to issue a decision; any appeals of decision or a failure to make a decision, may be appealed to United States Supreme Court. No one may be removed from the ballot after August twenty-fifth day of a Presidential election year for any reason other than death.
Subsection 9) Congressional Elections. In years when regular elections for Congress are held. A primary for reducing the number of candidates that will be on the general election ballot, or any special election ballot, may be held on date, and manner, set by state law but before the nineteenth day of August in the Congressional election years. Primary votes must be held according to the rules set in this section. Candidates shall meet that states ballot requirements which must be set by state law, in an equitable manner not requiring, for a seat in Congress’s house of representatives, more than 1,250 petition signatures of voters in their district, or five percent of the voters in their district, whichever is less, to get on the ballot; for a seat in Congress’s Senate, not requiring more than 15,000 signatures of registered voters in the state, or 5 percent of registered voters in the state, whichever is less, to be placed on the ballot. No one may be removed from the ballot after August twenty-fifth day of an election year for any reason other than death. No runoff elections can be set after the general election day in November.
Subsection 10) Lawfare
A. Lawfare is defined as the use of legal action(s) to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the use of legal systems or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent, and/or to deter a pollical opponent’s usage of their legal rights and/or bringing criminal charges against a pollical opponent for pollical reasons.
Pollical opponent is defined a person who is a declared candidate for United States elected office, State elected office, or local elected office, and/or has been a declared candidate for United States elected office, State elected office, or local elected office within the last ten years and/or is a lawyer who has or had a client who is or was declared for United States elected office, State elected office, or local elected office within the last ten years, and/or officers or board members of a pollical action committee and/or officers or board members of a state pollical committee and/or officers or board members of a pollical caucus; which has filed any required documents to raise campaign money and/or raise money to support or oppose pollical issue(s) with the Federal Election Commission, or an appropriate State or local agency.
Declared candidate is defined as a person who started raising money to run for United States elected office, State elected office, or local elected office and has filed any required documents to raise campaign money with the Federal Election Commission, or an appropriate State or local agency.
Criminal Lawfare is defined as the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent, and/or to deter a pollical opponent’s usage of their legal rights and/or bringing criminal charges against a pollical opponent for pollical reasons.
B. Should any person(s) bring a lawsuit to prevent or discourage a pollical opponent from running for public office and/or to remove a pollical opponent from the ballot, unless a court of competent jurisdiction finds they should be removed from the ballot, and/or fund or bring a suit to embarrass a pollical opponent and/or fund or bring a suit to bankrupt a pollical opponent and/or disbar a pollical opponent, as punishment for running or supporting a candidate and/or a disbar lawyer who has or had a declared candidate for pollical office as a client, or a pollical party as a client because they supported their client; they shall be guilty of lawfare and have repay triple all their pollical opponent legal fees, other damages, and court costs; if a corporation commits lawfare its officers and/or directors and/or lawyers are jointly and severally liable for these damages. The victim(s) of the lawfare actions above may file suit in the United States district court having jurisdiction where that person currently resides to obtain these damages and/or be restored to the bar and/or have the civil case dismissed; if they can prove based on a preponderance of evidence, that the civil case(s) were brought as result of lawfare.
C. A person who is a declared candidate for pollical office or has been a declared candidate for pollical office within the last ten years, or a lawyer who has or had a declared candidate for pollical office as a client, or a pollical party as a client, within the last ten years and/or officers or board members of a pollical action committee and/or officers or board members of a state pollical committee and/or officers or board members of a pollical caucus; which has filed any required documents to raise campaign money and/or raise money to support or oppose pollical issue(s) with the Federal Election Commission, or an appropriate State or local agency; and who is arrested, and/or indicted by any state grand jury, local grand jury in the United States, or indicted by a United States grand jury and/or is the victim of the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the victim of the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent; that person is entitled to petition the United States district court having jurisdiction where that person currently resides to review the arrest and/or indictment and/or the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent, to see if it is related to lawfare; their trial shall be delayed while the court holds a hearing to review the indictment and/or arrest and/or the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent and/or is the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent.
If the court rules that lawfare did not occur the trial may proceed. However, if that United States district court finds the charges and/or actions based on a preponderance of evidence, were brought as a result of lawfare it shall dismiss the indictment and/or charges and/or legal action(s), with prejudice, and the court shall appoint a special prosecutor with the same powers as an United States attorney, at the expense of the United States Department of Justice, for term of four years, to empanel a grand jury(juries) in the United States court district(s) having jurisdiction where the indictment was obtained and/or arrest occurred and/or the use of legal action(s) using government funds to cause problems for a pollical opponent occurred and/or is the use of government power, or institutions to damage or delegitimize a pollical opponent occurred, to see if Criminal lawfare and/or any other United States’ election related laws were violated and if they were violated indict and prosecute the person(s) who violated United States’ laws. The court that appointed special prosecutor may for death, resignation, or just cause, replace the special prosecutor with another person to serve the remainer of the term. If for any reason these criminal case(s) are still pending at the end of the special prosecutor’s term; then the criminal case(s) shall transfer to the United States attorney office having jurisdiction.
Any person, is guilty of criminal lawfare a felony, if they bring in their official capacity, or caused to brought, criminal charges against a Pollical opponent without just cause, and/or unlawful/unjustly limit the criminal defense of a Pollical opponent and/or against a lawyer who has/had a declared candidate for pollical office as a client within the last ten years, or had/has a pollical party as a client within the last ten years, and/or unlawful/unjustly limit the criminal defense of such lawyer. A government official is guilty of criminal lawfare if that government official and/or their staff bring a lawsuit, or other legal action, found to be lawfare, at government expense to prevent or discourage a pollical opponent from running for public office.
The penalty for criminal lawfare shall be not less than three months and not more than two years imprisonment and/or a fine of up to twenty thousand dollars. The statute of limitations for both criminal lawfare and civil lawfare shall be five years from the date the last lawfare action occurred.
D. A civil lawfare action that occurred prior to this section taking effect, that a trial has not been held, or is still on appeal; the persons affected may still file suit in the United States district court having jurisdiction where that person currently resides to obtain these damages and/or be restored to the bar and/or have the civil case dismissed. A criminal lawfare case that occurred prior to this section taking effect, that a trial has not been held, or is still on appeal may still have those case(s) reviewed by the United States district court having jurisdiction where that person currently resides; but only actions that occurred after this section took effect may be prosecuted for criminal lawfare.
Subsection 11) In the State of Louisiana, a parish is a county. In the state of Alaska, a borough is a county. Local governments’ that act like a county in handling elections maybe treated as a county. The Federal Election Commission shall by regulation define what is a county in a state or part of a state, that lacks counties, define what is a county board of elections in a state or part of a state, that lacks them, and issue appropriate regulations to enforce this section. If appropriate regulations have not been adopted defining a county, a board of elections, and/or define Local governments’ that act like a county as stated above, the United States courts having jurisdiction shall issue court orders defining such, until such regulations are adopted. All elections held in the District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the United States Virgin Islands shall follow the rules in this section. This act is authorized under the fourteenth article of amendment, the ninth article of amendment, Article I Section 4, and Article IV Section 4 Republican Form of Government clause. Subsection 10 shall take effect as soon as the bill that contains it is signed by the President or becomes law; Subsection 8 shall take effect on first day of January, after the bill that contains it is signed by the President or becomes law; the rest of this section shall take effect ninety days after the bill that contains it is signed by the President or becomes law. If any part of this law is found to be unconstitutional by a court of competent jurisdiction the remainder shall remain in effect.