Virginia under the DOJ microscope over voter rolls
Access to Voter Rolls is very complicated and very expensive in Virginia, there appears to be a reason why
The foundation of election integrity in America are trusted voter rolls.
Virginia has about 6 million registered voters, a 2019 Freedom of Information Act Request of Prince William County Jury Duty rejections showed that based on the 20 or so rejection categories, at a minimum, 6% of the Jury Duty rejection aggregate numbers would absolutely make the person ineligible to vote while another 5% could possibly make them ineligible to vote.
Guess where the Virginia Jury Duty rolls come from?
You guessed it, the Virginia Election Rolls.
That means anywhere from about 360,000 to about 650,000 unlawful voters are possibly on the Virginia rolls.
Getting access to the election rolls in Virginia are expensive and hard - perhaps a holdover from Jim Crow Days. Now the Jim Crow era attitudes and rules are making it very hard to find truth on Virginia Voter Rolls.
Governor Youngkin had a Supreme Court win in October 2024 that per 18USC611, one has to be a U.S. Citizen to vote in a Federal Election and that unlawful voters could be removed from the Election Rolls at any time.
Running up to the Virginia Elections in 2025, Youngkin did nothing to review the Election Rolls and remove unlawful voters.
The result - Governor Spanberger, who has launched a woke, left wing campaign to grab guns, push abortion, and create ICE free zones.
Elections have consequences, stolen elections have catastrophic consequences.
Hopefully the DOJ action reveals truth on the Virginia Election Rolls.
© 2026 UAEC LLC All viewpoints are personal and do not reflect the viewpoints of any organization.


Virginia is home to a team of talented volunteers who have been purchasing Virginia's Registered Voter Lists, Voter History Lists, Daily Activity Reports, and much more, and performing some sophisticated analysis on that data over the past 5 years. Election Process Education Corporation (EPEC) is their name. Typical of their work is their recent report where they quantified the number of noncitizen votes in recent Virginia elections for noncitizens self-reporting their non-citizenship status. ( https://digitalpollwatchers.org/non-citizen-registrations-with-previous-voting-history-in-va-election-data-update-jan-2026/?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email ). The organization is worth following. And yes, it is safe to say EPEC has been generally disappointed with the performance of the prior administration with respect to election integrity/reform matters.