The Biden-Harris administration's easily penetrable border, lax security and interior enforcement policies have led to millions of illegals possibly being able to vote in the 2024 elections, according to election experts.
Kerri Toloczko, executive director of Election Integrity Network and senior advisor to the Only Citizens Vote Coalition, told conservative media outlet Washington Stand that a 2014 academic journal found that 6.4 percent of noncitizens voted in 2008.
"There are about 24 million noncitizens in the U.S. right now. If they voted only at the same rate of 6.4 percent this year as they did in 2008, they would account for 1.5 million votes." Toloczko said. "Based on the increased noncitizen activity at state [Department of Motor Vehicles] DMVs and the work of left-wing voter registration activists, this 6.4 percent could be much higher than it was in 2008. We could be looking at over two million unlawful noncitizen votes."
Moreover, the United States House of Representatives published a 22-page report in June highlighting illegal aliens voting in the United States. Currently, 17 cities in California, Maryland and Vermont in addition to the District of Columbia let non-citizens vote in elections. Several irregularities have also been reported although non-citizens are only supposed to vote in local elections.
Toloczko called attention to cases of foreigners lawfully voting in American elections.
"The federal government recently indicted a group of noncitizens from 15 different countries on federal voting charges. Texas recently purged 6,500 noncitizens from its voter rolls – 30 percent of whom had voting records," Toloczko said.
Nearly 100,000 "drivers" in Arizona incorrectly registered as voters regardless of citizenship status
Meanwhile, a significant voter registration error in Arizona has called the eligibility of nearly 100,000 voters into question just weeks before the mailing of election ballots.
According to Secretary of State Adrian Fontes, a long-standing mistake in how the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division (MVD) has provided driver's license data to the voter registration system, misclassifying voters' citizenship status.
The state incorrectly marked these voters as already having provided documented proof of U.S. citizenshipwhen really, it's unclear whether they have, Fontes said. Under Arizona law, proof of citizenship is required to vote in state and local elections, though individuals can still vote in federal elections without this documentation. ( "The problem stems from how the MVD recorded data for individuals who obtained their driver's licenses before October 1996," Fontes explained. "If those individuals later requested a duplicate or updated license, election officials believed they had already provided the necessary proof of citizenship, which wasn't necessarily the case."
The issue was uncovered when a Maricopa County worker flagged a case where an individual on the voter rolls, who had only a green card, was incorrectly listed as a full-ballot voter. Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer confirmed that his office brought the discrepancy to state officials' attention.
The mistake potentially affects thousands of voters, many of whom have valid driver's licenses issued before the law was updated in 1996 to require proof of citizenship for full-ballot voter eligibility. These individuals should have been designated as "federal-only" voters, which restricts them from voting in federal elections for president and Congress.
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