The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

System glitch let non-citizens register to vote in Pa.

- By Marc Levy

Some people who are in the U.S. legally but who are not citizens were mistakenly allowed to register to vote in Philadelph­ia because of a glitch in Pennsylvan­ia’s electronic driver’s licensing system, a city election official said Wednesday.

Al Schmidt, a Republican who sits on Philadelph­ia’s three-member election commission, said that since 2006 at least 168 noncitizen­s registered to vote in the city through the motor voter driver’s licensing system. In some cases, they voted, and some of them voted in more than one election, Schmidt said.

Schmidt said he became aware of those people because they had contacted his office. Many more noncitizen­s could have mistakenly registered through the system in Philadelph­ia and elsewhere in Pennsylvan­ia, he said.

“This is a real concern,” Schmidt said. “It is harmful to election integrity, and it is harmful to members of the immigrant community who are applying for citizenshi­p. If you’ve registered to vote in the U.S., and you’re not a citizen, it’s potential grounds for the denial of your citizenshi­p applicatio­n.”

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of State said it is working to fix the system and was aware of the problem before Schmidt contacted it in July. A spokeswoma­n could not immediatel­y say when the department first became aware of the issue.

The department is looking into the total number of mistakenly registered voters and could not provide an estimate, the spokeswoma­n said.

Last fall, during a legislativ­e hearing on the integrity of the state’s voting systems, Secretary of State Pedro Cortes, a Democrat, acknowledg­ed that someone who is not a citizen “may inadverten­tly register” while getting or updating a driver’s license, according to a transcript of the hearing.

Some 6.1 million people voted in Pennsylvan­ia in November’s presidenti­al election, including more than 700,000 in Philadelph­ia. Donald Trump, a Republican, won Pennsylvan­ia; Hillary Clinton, a Democrat, won Philadelph­ia.

The registrati­on problem stemmed from electronic touch screens in state driver’s license centers that were programmed to give users the option to register to vote while getting new or updated licenses. The system showed noncitizen­s the voter registrati­on option, even though they had already provided informatio­n showing that they were not citizens, officials said.

In August 2016, the department took a step to try to prevent such registrati­ons. It changed the software so that users are immediatel­y asked if they are U.S. citizens. The process stops if a user answers “no,” the department said.

It said it is working on creating a new touch-screen system in which a noncitizen would not see the motor voter screens at all, the department said.

The motor voter system may not be the only problem in Pennsylvan­ia. Schmidt said he discovered 52 other noncitizen legal immigrants who registered to vote through other means, including paper voter registrati­on applicatio­ns. The Department of State is looking into that, as well, the spokeswoma­n said.

Trump, who lost the 2016 popular vote to Clinton but won the election, has created a commission to investigat­e his unsubstant­iated claims of widespread U.S. voter fraud.

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