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Former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows was reportedly registered to vote simultaneously in three states — South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia.
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An elections board in a North Carolina county has removed Mark Meadows, a former chief of staff to President Donald Trump, from its list of registered voters after documents showed he lived in Virginia and voted in the 2021 election there.
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Mark Meadows, chief of staff under President Trump and former congressman from North Carolina, is back in the news over questions about the official residence on his voter registration. WFAE’s Tommy Tomlinson, in his On My Mind commentary, delves into the contradiction between what Meadows has said and what he may have done.
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Public records show Mark Meadows, the former Republican congressman and Trump chief of staff, is registered to vote in two states, including North Carolina, where he listed a mobile home he did not own — and may never have visited — as his legal residence weeks before casting a ballot in the 2020 election.
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The decision comes a week after Meadows' attorney said the former White House chief of staff would voluntarily speak with the committee.
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The House committee investigating the Capitol attack had threatened Meadows with a criminal contempt referral because he had previously refused to cooperate.
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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Friday named Rep. Mark Meadows as his new chief of staff, replacing Mick Mulvaney, who been acting in the role for…
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Seven North Carolina Congressional Republicans voted Wednesday in favor of a bi-partisan resolution condemning President Trump’s decision to withdraw…