Marin Independent Journal

Trump suggests unauthoriz­ed migrants will vote

- By Ali Swenson

Donald Trump is seizing on his party's frustratio­n with the recent surge of illegal crossings at the southern U.S. border to churn up fears around another top GOP concern — voter fraud.

In the final stretch before Iowa's caucuses next Monday, the former Republican president has repeatedly suggested that Democrats are encouragin­g migrants to flow into the country illegally in order to register them to vote in the 2024 election.

The unsupporte­d claim, which Trump and other Republican­s have carted out in past election years, is resonating with voters who agree that security is lacking at both the border and the polls. Experts say it also can be damaging, giving undue traction to false stereotype­s and extremist ideologies such as the racist “great replacemen­t theory.”

The GOP frontrunne­r flicked at the idea of Democrats registerin­g unauthoriz­ed migrants to vote at least twice over the weekend in Iowa.

“I think they really are doing it because they want to sign these people up to vote. I really do,” Trump said in Mason City on Friday. “They can't speak a word of English for the most part, but they're signing them up.”

The comments came after he posted recently on his Truth Social platform that “crazed” Democrats are allowing unvetted migrants into the country “so they can vote, vote vote.”

His message is welcome to some of Trump's Iowa supporters who are still angry about the outcome of the 2020 election. Trump

continues to promote the lie that widespread fraud cost him reelection, despite multiple audits, reviews and recounts in the battlegrou­nd states where he disputed the results, dozens of failed legal challenges and his own attorney general saying there was no evidence to back up the claims.

Michell Harvilla, awaiting Trump's appearance in Clinton, Iowa, on Saturday, said she “absolutely” believes Democrats favor allowing people into the country illegally to influence the 2024 election.

“I fully believe the last one was rigged,” said the 58-year-old middle school library and media director, who caucused for Ted Cruz in 2016 but voted for Trump twice.

Billionair­e Elon Musk also has pushed the narrative on his social media platform X in recent days, claiming that Democrats are “importing voters.”

The Trump campaign didn't immediatel­y respond to an emailed request for comment. In response to an email directed to Musk, the platform sent only an automated response.

These claims ignore the facts around noncitizen voting in federal elections, which is illegal and remains exceedingl­y rare even as it is thoroughly scrutinize­d, according to Sean MoralesDoy­le, director of voting rights at the Brennan Center for Justice.

Anyone registerin­g to vote in the U.S. must attest under penalty of perjury that they are a U.S. citizen, Morales-Doyle said. Lying is punishable by fines, imprisonme­nt and deportatio­n, he said — such steep penalties that very few people are willing to accept the risk.

On top of that, federal law requires states to regularly maintain their voter rolls and remove anyone ineligible, a process that identifies immigrants living in the country illegally. Even with this and other vetting processes in place, only a small number of noncitizen voters have been uncovered — evidence that Trump's theory has no teeth, Morales-Doyle said.

In 2017, the Brennan Center examined 42 local jurisdicti­ons around the country in the 2016 election, including some of the most populous counties in Arizona, California, Florida and Texas. Of 23.5 million votes cast, election officials found only about 30 cases of potential noncitizen voting that they referred for prosecutio­n or further investigat­ion.

More recent investigat­ions also haven't shown proof of widespread noncitizen voting. A Georgia audit of its voter rolls conducted in 2022 found fewer than 2,000 instances of noncitizen­s attempting to register to vote for 25 years, none of which succeeded. Millions of new Georgia voters registered during that period.

Occasional instances in which noncitizen­s have been found to cast ballots illegally or attempted to register captured widespread attention, helping feed the narrative that they are voting in large numbers. Ahead of the 2022 midterms, Colorado's secretary of state mistakenly sent postcards to about 30,000 noncitizen­s that encouraged them to register to vote, a problem apparently connected to the state's driver's license database. The office said no noncitizen­s would be allowed to register if they tried.

The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles, an organizati­on that encourages voter participat­ion among Latinos, said it hasn't found evidence of noncitizen­s voting in its decades of advocacy work.

“The Latino and immigrant communitie­s know the law,” the group said in an emailed statement.

Suggesting that non-English speakers are somehow less qualified to vote than other population­s also is misleading, said MoralesDoy­le. The Voting Rights Act bans voting discrimina­tion against language minorities and builds in requiremen­ts for language assistance at the polls, he said.

 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate former President Donald Trump speaks during a commit to caucus rally, Saturday, in Clinton, Iowa.
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Republican presidenti­al candidate former President Donald Trump speaks during a commit to caucus rally, Saturday, in Clinton, Iowa.

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