Gingrich cites fraud in Virginia ballot failure

MASON CITY, Iowa, (Reuters) – U.S. Republican  presidential candidate Newt Gingrich said yesterday his  failure to meet the requirements to take part in Virginia’s  presidential nominating contest resulted from fraud by a worker  hired by his campaign.

Gingrich, who lives in Virginia, scrambled to submit the  petitions necessary to get on the ballot on time, but the state  party said on Saturday a review process showed he did not have  the required 10,000 verifiable signatures.

Gingrich’s campaign hired workers to gather those  signatures, and the former speaker of the U.S. House of  Representatives said at a campaign stop that one of those  workers had committed fraud.

“We hired somebody who turned in false signatures. We turned  in 11,100 – we needed 10,000 – 1,500 of them were by one guy who  frankly committed fraud,” Gingrich said, according to CNN.

Gingrich had been leading his Republican rivals in the  state. Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and Texas  Congressman Ron Paul were the only candidates from the field of  top Republican candidates to qualify to be on Virginia’s ballot.

Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry also failed to  qualify in Virginia because he lacked the 10,000 verifiable  signatures.

On Tuesday he filed a federal lawsuit challenging Virginia’s  qualification process on constitutional grounds. Perry said it  restricts the access of the state’s voters to the candidates of  their choosing.