Hunters who vote in North Dakota's midterm elections next week will not lose their hunting licenses, despite a new ad by the North Dakota Democratic Party claiming that voting could cost hunters their out-of-state licenses.
"Attention hunters: Voting in North Dakota could cost you your out-of-state hunting licenses," says the Facebook ad released earlier this week.
PolitiFact explained that hunters do not have to fear that they may lose their licenses if they vote.
If you have an out-of-state hunting license anywhere outside of North Dakota—and it's an out-of-state license, rather than a residential one for residents of that state—you're safe.
If you have a North Dakota residential hunting license, you're also safe, because in applying for that license you already gave up any other residential licenses. North Dakota's Game and Fish department doesn't allow a person to hold two residential licenses. (Those tend to expire within a season or year anyway.)
PolitiFact also found no evidence that people living in North Dakota who have a residential license in another state, such as people who recently moved, would lose those licenses. The Fish and Wildlife offices in Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota, and Minnesota said voting in North Dakota would not make a residential license void.
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2 comments:
That is all the democrats have - LIES!!!
Hysterical!
We like Politifact when it lights Dems pants on fire... tell me, how many Pant Fires does Trump have on that site...
All I'm asking for is some consistency...
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