NC court rules state violated law by allowing nonresidents to vote in federal elections
Analysis
The claim that a North Carolina court ruled the state violated the law by allowing nonresidents to vote in federal elections is not supported by the available sources. The referenced court decision (Griffin case) explicitly did not extend its ruling to federal elections, focusing instead on non-federal or state/local elections. Federal law prohibits noncitizens from voting in federal elections, and no credible source confirms that North Carolina courts have found violations related to nonresident voting in federal contests. The sources mostly discuss state-level election issues or general voting eligibility but do not confirm any court ruling invalidating nonresident voting in federal elections in North Carolina.
Sources
States the Griffin Court did not extend its ruling to federal elections.
Mentions federal courts will consider compliance but does not confirm violation or ruling.
Provides general election law overview without confirming the claim.
Affirms federal law prohibits noncitizen voting in federal elections, no NC ruling cited.
Clarifies noncitizens cannot vote federally, no NC court ruling mentioned.
Notes NC Supreme Court decision limits voting to certain elections, excluding federal.
Irrelevant to voting laws.
Provides voter ID info, no support for claim.
Discusses California voting rules, unrelated.
Supreme Court case unrelated to nonresident voting claims.
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