Why is it that when legitimate examples of election fraud come to light, they always seem to come from one party?
The Republican National Committee has fired a controversial consulting firm it was paying millions of dollars to conduct voter registration in five battleground states, NBC News has learned.
The move came after the Palm Beach County, Fla., elections supervisor discovered 108 potentially fraudulent registration forms submitted by the GOP consulting firm, including suspected phony signatures and home addresses that matched those of a gas station, a medical building and a Land Rover dealership.
NBC News has learned that two other Florida counties, Santa Rosa and Okaloosa, have also reported possible fraudulent registration forms submitted by the firm, including apparent dead people being registered as new voters.
As NBC News’ Michael Isikoff reported, at issue is a firm called Strategic Allied Consulting, but by long-time consultant Nathan Sproul, which had been hired by the Republican National Committee’s Sean Spicer to register voters in Florida, Nevada, North Carolina, Colorado, and Virginia — five key battleground states in 2012.
So far in 2012, the RNC has paid Strategic Allied Consulting $2.9 million for its services to the national party, as well as state affiliates. The relationship, however, has been severed in light of the firm’s alleged crimes.
So, to review the larger context, the Republican National Committee was apoplectic in accusing groups like ACORN of overseeing fraudulent voter-registration efforts, and at the same time, the Republican National Committee paid millions to a Republican firm that’s accused of overseeing fraudulent voter-registration efforts.
A Republican elections supervisor in the Florida panhandle said, “It’s kind of ironic that the dead people they accused ACORN of registering are now being done by the [Republican Party of Florida].”
Yes, actually, it is kind of ironic.
But wait, it gets worse.
Nathan Sproul, who was also hired by the Romney campaign to help with “field consulting,” is not new to controversy. On the contrary, Sproul had already been accused of massive voter registration fraud in several states, long before the 2012 cycle.








