@Sanguine @berdie @mystery-ak @Cyber Liberty I will explain this more in detail why DMV locations
cannot put a person's name on the State's Master Voter List.
Let's define what we are talking about - We are not talking about every way voter fraud could happen. We are only talking about the
process that happens when a person fills out a form at a DMV location to register to vote.
Here is why/how filling out a form at a DMV location came about:
Many people didn't know they had to go to a county registration office to register to vote. Today, going there still doesn't register them to vote. In 2002, after the Florida problem, the federal government passed the Help America Vote Act that made every state's Secretary of State's Election Division the keeper of the State Master Voter List. A county would send the person's information to them and they would determine if that person was a legal voter, then tell the county to put the name on their list or not put it on there. So, see, even a county cannot access the State's Master Voter List. If a county can't do it, it could be ridiculous to think a DMV location could do it. No one gets access to the State Master Voter list except the state's election division.
Back to the people who want to register to vote and don't know how to do it. The Federal government did this to help people register to vote:
“The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA) (52 U.S.C. §§ 20501–20511) (formerly 42 U.S.C. §§ 1973gg–1973gg-10), also known as the Motor Voter Act, is a United States federal law signed into law by President Bill Clinton on May 20, 1993, and which came into effect on January 1, 1995. The law was enacted under the Elections Clause of the United States Constitution. The law advances voting rights in the United States by requiring state governments to offer voter registration opportunities to any eligible person who applies for or renews a driver license or applies for public assistance …â€
Now, think realistically about this: The State's Master Voter List is held by the Secretary of State's Election Division. Access to this list is limited to the State Election Division. Can you imagine the mess up/screw up of the State Master Voting List if every DMV location in every county in a state could access the secure State's Master Voting List?
Once again, a DMV location can offer a person the service of sending their information to the Secretary of State’s Election Division for voter registration. That division will determine if that person is a citizen and eligible to vote in that county.