Mark Meadows was one of the most vociferous proponents of the lie that election fraud in 2020 helped catapult Joe Biden to the White House.

Turns out, Meadows had unique insight into the matter. According to The Washington Post, Donald Trump’s former White House Chief of Staff was simultaneously registered to vote in three states: North Carolina, Virginia and South Carolina.

“The overlap lasted about three weeks, and it might have continued if revelations about Meadows’s voting record had not attracted scrutiny in North Carolina,” reports the Post, which notes that Meadows is still registered in Virginia and South Carolina. North Carolina booted him from their voter rolls earlier this month after they discovered he did not live at an address he listed on voting records.

The outlet underscores Meadows’ galling hypocrisy :

After Donald Trump lost the presidential election, falsely claiming election fraud, Meadows became senior partner at the Conservative Partnership Institute (CPI), which promotes “election integrity” efforts. The organization’s “citizen’s guide” urges activists to determine that the registrations of their neighbors are legal by checking on “whether voters have moved, or if the registrations are PO Boxes, commercial addresses or vacant lots” and then “obtaining evidence: photos of commercial buildings? Vacant lots?” and “securing affidavits from current residents that a registered voter has moved.”

The Post adds:

It is not unusual for some overlap in voter rolls as people move across state lines, and many people do not bother to terminate their voting registration when they move. In contrast to Meadows, however, former secretary of state Mike Pompeo canceled his voter registration in Kansas just a few months after selling his home in Wichita and moving to McLean when he became CIA director.

South Carolina and Virginia are members of the Electronic Registration Information Center, a nonprofit that provides member states with reports on voters. If Meadows had listed his Virginia voter registration while registering in South Carolina, the state would have notified Virginia. Angie Maniglia Turner, Alexandria’s general registrar and director of elections, said Thursday that there has been no change in the voter registration status in Virginia of either Mark or Debra Meadows.

Ben Williamson, a spokesman for Mark Meadows, declined to comment.