×
Sunday, May 17, 2026

Mark Meadows may have committed voter fraud by listing random North Carolina address in voter registration - The Washington Post

Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows registered to vote in 2020 using the address of a North Carolina mobile home he has never lived in, a move scrutinized as potential voter fraud.

According to the New Yorker, Meadows filed his voter registration in September 2020, three weeks before North Carolina’s deadline for the general election, listing his residential address as a mobile home in Scaly Mountain, N.C.

It is unclear if Meadows has spent even one night at that address. The small mobile home belongs to a Lowe’s retail manager, who bought it last summer from a widow living in Florida. The woman, whom the New Yorker did not identify by name, told the magazine that she had no idea Meadows had listed the home as his address in his voter registration form.

Meadows, who served as a congressman for North Carolina’s 11th District from 2013 to 2020, sold his official residence in Sapphire, N.C., shortly before becoming President Donald Trump’s chief of staff in March 2020.

After the election, Meadows pushed Trump’s false claims that widespread voter fraud cost him the election that he lost to Democrat Joe Biden.

Meadows did not purchase a new home in North Carolina after that, nor did he register as a voter for the general election until Sept. 19, 2020, when he filed his registration using the address of the mobile home, the New Yorker said. In his form, he wrote that he would move into the mobile home the next day.

It is illegal to provide false information on a voter...



Read Full Story: https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/03/07/meadows-address-voter-regi...