Texas finds thousands of illegal immigrants registered to vote on state voter rolls

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A Texas election review has identified thousands of illegal immigrants on the state's voter rolls, Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson said Monday.

Nelson said a cross-check of state voter records found that more than 2,700 possible illegal immigrants were registered on the voter rolls, leading to an eligibility review across the 254 counties.

The data came from a full comparison of Texas’s 18 million registered voters against federal citizenship records in the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ SAVE database, according to the secretary of state's office.

"Only eligible United States citizens may participate in our elections," Nelson said. "The Trump Administration’s decision to give states free and direct access to this data set for the first time has been a game changer, and we appreciate the partnership with the federal government to verify the citizenship of those on our voter rolls and maintain accurate voter lists."

The investigation showed after running the SAVE cross-check, that state officials could identify 2,724 potential noncitizens whose voter files have been sent to local counties to be further investigated.

This process falls under Chapter 16 of the Texas Election Code, which requires counties to verify each voter's eligibility and remove confirmed noncitizens from the rolls.

Nelson said the review is part of an effort to maintain an accurate voter list and to safeguard election integrity ahead of the 2026 election cycle.

"Everyone’s right to vote is sacred and must be protected," Nelson said. "We encourage counties to conduct rigorous investigations to determine if any voter is ineligible – just as they do with any other data set we provide."

Each flagged voter will receive a notice from their county registrar giving them 30 days to provide proof of U.S. citizenship. If a voter does not respond, their registration will be canceled, though it can be reinstated immediately once proof of citizenship is provided.

Nelson's statement said confirmed noncitizens who voted in previous Texas elections will be referred to the attorney general's office for further review and potential prosecution.

The announcement comes amid growing national scrutiny of voter rolls as several states – including Georgia, Arizona and Florida – have conducted similar audits of voter eligibility.

Republican Governor Greg Abbott said that since Senate Bill 1 was signed into law, Texas has removed more than 1 million ineligible or outdated registrations from the state’s voter rolls, calling the effort essential to safeguard Texans' right to vote.

 
A Texas election review has identified thousands of illegal immigrants on the state's voter rolls, Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson said Monday.

Nelson said a cross-check of state voter records found that more than 2,700 possible illegal immigrants were registered on the voter rolls, leading to an eligibility review across the 254 counties.

The data came from a full comparison of Texas’s 18 million registered voters against federal citizenship records in the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ SAVE database, according to the secretary of state's office.

"Only eligible United States citizens may participate in our elections," Nelson said. "The Trump Administration’s decision to give states free and direct access to this data set for the first time has been a game changer, and we appreciate the partnership with the federal government to verify the citizenship of those on our voter rolls and maintain accurate voter lists."

The investigation showed after running the SAVE cross-check, that state officials could identify 2,724 potential noncitizens whose voter files have been sent to local counties to be further investigated.

This process falls under Chapter 16 of the Texas Election Code, which requires counties to verify each voter's eligibility and remove confirmed noncitizens from the rolls.

Nelson said the review is part of an effort to maintain an accurate voter list and to safeguard election integrity ahead of the 2026 election cycle.

"Everyone’s right to vote is sacred and must be protected," Nelson said. "We encourage counties to conduct rigorous investigations to determine if any voter is ineligible – just as they do with any other data set we provide."

Each flagged voter will receive a notice from their county registrar giving them 30 days to provide proof of U.S. citizenship. If a voter does not respond, their registration will be canceled, though it can be reinstated immediately once proof of citizenship is provided.

Nelson's statement said confirmed noncitizens who voted in previous Texas elections will be referred to the attorney general's office for further review and potential prosecution.

The announcement comes amid growing national scrutiny of voter rolls as several states – including Georgia, Arizona and Florida – have conducted similar audits of voter eligibility.

Republican Governor Greg Abbott said that since Senate Bill 1 was signed into law, Texas has removed more than 1 million ineligible or outdated registrations from the state’s voter rolls, calling the effort essential to safeguard Texans' right to vote.

Did they vote? Or did they just register to vote?

Big difference
 
The far left loons tell us that illegals can't vote.

The far left loons lie.

Why would illegals register if they were not going to vote?
 
A Texas election review has identified thousands of illegal immigrants on the state's voter rolls, Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson said Monday.

Nelson said a cross-check of state voter records found that more than 2,700 possible illegal immigrants were registered on the voter rolls, leading to an eligibility review across the 254 counties.

The data came from a full comparison of Texas’s 18 million registered voters against federal citizenship records in the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ SAVE database, according to the secretary of state's office.

"Only eligible United States citizens may participate in our elections," Nelson said. "The Trump Administration’s decision to give states free and direct access to this data set for the first time has been a game changer, and we appreciate the partnership with the federal government to verify the citizenship of those on our voter rolls and maintain accurate voter lists."

The investigation showed after running the SAVE cross-check, that state officials could identify 2,724 potential noncitizens whose voter files have been sent to local counties to be further investigated.

This process falls under Chapter 16 of the Texas Election Code, which requires counties to verify each voter's eligibility and remove confirmed noncitizens from the rolls.

Nelson said the review is part of an effort to maintain an accurate voter list and to safeguard election integrity ahead of the 2026 election cycle.

"Everyone’s right to vote is sacred and must be protected," Nelson said. "We encourage counties to conduct rigorous investigations to determine if any voter is ineligible – just as they do with any other data set we provide."

Each flagged voter will receive a notice from their county registrar giving them 30 days to provide proof of U.S. citizenship. If a voter does not respond, their registration will be canceled, though it can be reinstated immediately once proof of citizenship is provided.

Nelson's statement said confirmed noncitizens who voted in previous Texas elections will be referred to the attorney general's office for further review and potential prosecution.

The announcement comes amid growing national scrutiny of voter rolls as several states – including Georgia, Arizona and Florida – have conducted similar audits of voter eligibility.

Republican Governor Greg Abbott said that since Senate Bill 1 was signed into law, Texas has removed more than 1 million ineligible or outdated registrations from the state’s voter rolls, calling the effort essential to safeguard Texans' right to vote.

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TnkJ8_BmSI
 
Really? Any evidence that they voted?

Yes.


Convictions:


And that's just the tip of the Iceberg. We know that for every conviction for vote-fraud, thousands of cases are known to have existed, but there is not enough evidence to convict a particular individual. There is enough evidence to know that the vote-fraud occurred, but the lines were deliberately blurring, to convict a particular illegal, who always hide their identity, with the crime.




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A Texas election review has identified thousands of illegal immigrants on the state's voter rolls, Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson said Monday.

Nelson said a cross-check of state voter records found that more than 2,700 possible illegal immigrants were registered on the voter rolls, leading to an eligibility review across the 254 counties.

The data came from a full comparison of Texas’s 18 million registered voters against federal citizenship records in the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ SAVE database, according to the secretary of state's office.

"Only eligible United States citizens may participate in our elections," Nelson said. "The Trump Administration’s decision to give states free and direct access to this data set for the first time has been a game changer, and we appreciate the partnership with the federal government to verify the citizenship of those on our voter rolls and maintain accurate voter lists."

The investigation showed after running the SAVE cross-check, that state officials could identify 2,724 potential noncitizens whose voter files have been sent to local counties to be further investigated.

This process falls under Chapter 16 of the Texas Election Code, which requires counties to verify each voter's eligibility and remove confirmed noncitizens from the rolls.

Nelson said the review is part of an effort to maintain an accurate voter list and to safeguard election integrity ahead of the 2026 election cycle.

"Everyone’s right to vote is sacred and must be protected," Nelson said. "We encourage counties to conduct rigorous investigations to determine if any voter is ineligible – just as they do with any other data set we provide."

Each flagged voter will receive a notice from their county registrar giving them 30 days to provide proof of U.S. citizenship. If a voter does not respond, their registration will be canceled, though it can be reinstated immediately once proof of citizenship is provided.

Nelson's statement said confirmed noncitizens who voted in previous Texas elections will be referred to the attorney general's office for further review and potential prosecution.

The announcement comes amid growing national scrutiny of voter rolls as several states – including Georgia, Arizona and Florida – have conducted similar audits of voter eligibility.

Republican Governor Greg Abbott said that since Senate Bill 1 was signed into law, Texas has removed more than 1 million ineligible or outdated registrations from the state’s voter rolls, calling the effort essential to safeguard Texans' right to vote.

For the last three decades, none of these extravagant voter fraud claims have survived subsequent independent and nonpartisan investigation.
 
A Texas election review has identified thousands of illegal immigrants on the state's voter rolls, Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson said Monday.

Nelson said a cross-check of state voter records found that more than 2,700 possible illegal immigrants were registered on the voter rolls, leading to an eligibility review across the 254 counties.

The data came from a full comparison of Texas’s 18 million registered voters against federal citizenship records in the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ SAVE database, according to the secretary of state's office.

"Only eligible United States citizens may participate in our elections," Nelson said. "The Trump Administration’s decision to give states free and direct access to this data set for the first time has been a game changer, and we appreciate the partnership with the federal government to verify the citizenship of those on our voter rolls and maintain accurate voter lists."

The investigation showed after running the SAVE cross-check, that state officials could identify 2,724 potential noncitizens whose voter files have been sent to local counties to be further investigated.

This process falls under Chapter 16 of the Texas Election Code, which requires counties to verify each voter's eligibility and remove confirmed noncitizens from the rolls.

Nelson said the review is part of an effort to maintain an accurate voter list and to safeguard election integrity ahead of the 2026 election cycle.

"Everyone’s right to vote is sacred and must be protected," Nelson said. "We encourage counties to conduct rigorous investigations to determine if any voter is ineligible – just as they do with any other data set we provide."

Each flagged voter will receive a notice from their county registrar giving them 30 days to provide proof of U.S. citizenship. If a voter does not respond, their registration will be canceled, though it can be reinstated immediately once proof of citizenship is provided.

Nelson's statement said confirmed noncitizens who voted in previous Texas elections will be referred to the attorney general's office for further review and potential prosecution.

The announcement comes amid growing national scrutiny of voter rolls as several states – including Georgia, Arizona and Florida – have conducted similar audits of voter eligibility.

Republican Governor Greg Abbott said that since Senate Bill 1 was signed into law, Texas has removed more than 1 million ineligible or outdated registrations from the state’s voter rolls, calling the effort essential to safeguard Texans' right to vote.

2,724 potential noncitizens

Reading comprehension is not a MAGAT’s strong suit.
 
A Texas election review has identified thousands of illegal immigrants on the state's voter rolls, Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson said Monday.

Nelson said a cross-check of state voter records found that more than 2,700 possible illegal immigrants were registered on the voter rolls, leading to an eligibility review across the 254 counties.

The data came from a full comparison of Texas’s 18 million registered voters against federal citizenship records in the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ SAVE database, according to the secretary of state's office.

"Only eligible United States citizens may participate in our elections," Nelson said. "The Trump Administration’s decision to give states free and direct access to this data set for the first time has been a game changer, and we appreciate the partnership with the federal government to verify the citizenship of those on our voter rolls and maintain accurate voter lists."

The investigation showed after running the SAVE cross-check, that state officials could identify 2,724 potential noncitizens whose voter files have been sent to local counties to be further investigated.

This process falls under Chapter 16 of the Texas Election Code, which requires counties to verify each voter's eligibility and remove confirmed noncitizens from the rolls.

Nelson said the review is part of an effort to maintain an accurate voter list and to safeguard election integrity ahead of the 2026 election cycle.

"Everyone’s right to vote is sacred and must be protected," Nelson said. "We encourage counties to conduct rigorous investigations to determine if any voter is ineligible – just as they do with any other data set we provide."

Each flagged voter will receive a notice from their county registrar giving them 30 days to provide proof of U.S. citizenship. If a voter does not respond, their registration will be canceled, though it can be reinstated immediately once proof of citizenship is provided.

Nelson's statement said confirmed noncitizens who voted in previous Texas elections will be referred to the attorney general's office for further review and potential prosecution.

The announcement comes amid growing national scrutiny of voter rolls as several states – including Georgia, Arizona and Florida – have conducted similar audits of voter eligibility.

Republican Governor Greg Abbott said that since Senate Bill 1 was signed into law, Texas has removed more than 1 million ineligible or outdated registrations from the state’s voter rolls, calling the effort essential to safeguard Texans' right to vote.

You're headline is misleading. It says they flagged 2,700 people but it doesn't say they are all illegal.

You know what they say about assuming, but I'm assuming all states do something similar. New people turn 18 every year, people die every year etc. I assume most people want their state to have updated and as accurate as possible voter roles. That's a good thing. But this finding doesn't say that illegals are voting or have any influence on our elections.
 
A Texas election review has identified thousands of illegal immigrants on the state's voter rolls, Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson said Monday.

Nelson said a cross-check of state voter records found that more than 2,700 possible illegal immigrants were registered on the voter rolls, leading to an eligibility review across the 254 counties.

The data came from a full comparison of Texas’s 18 million registered voters against federal citizenship records in the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ SAVE database, according to the secretary of state's office.

"Only eligible United States citizens may participate in our elections," Nelson said. "The Trump Administration’s decision to give states free and direct access to this data set for the first time has been a game changer, and we appreciate the partnership with the federal government to verify the citizenship of those on our voter rolls and maintain accurate voter lists."

The investigation showed after running the SAVE cross-check, that state officials could identify 2,724 potential noncitizens whose voter files have been sent to local counties to be further investigated.

This process falls under Chapter 16 of the Texas Election Code, which requires counties to verify each voter's eligibility and remove confirmed noncitizens from the rolls.

Nelson said the review is part of an effort to maintain an accurate voter list and to safeguard election integrity ahead of the 2026 election cycle.

"Everyone’s right to vote is sacred and must be protected," Nelson said. "We encourage counties to conduct rigorous investigations to determine if any voter is ineligible – just as they do with any other data set we provide."

Each flagged voter will receive a notice from their county registrar giving them 30 days to provide proof of U.S. citizenship. If a voter does not respond, their registration will be canceled, though it can be reinstated immediately once proof of citizenship is provided.

Nelson's statement said confirmed noncitizens who voted in previous Texas elections will be referred to the attorney general's office for further review and potential prosecution.

The announcement comes amid growing national scrutiny of voter rolls as several states – including Georgia, Arizona and Florida – have conducted similar audits of voter eligibility.

Republican Governor Greg Abbott said that since Senate Bill 1 was signed into law, Texas has removed more than 1 million ineligible or outdated registrations from the state’s voter rolls, calling the effort essential to safeguard Texans' right to vote.

The last time Texas did this less than 10% were non citizens and none of them had voted.

Months before the November 2024 election, Gov. Greg Abbott announced that 6,500 noncitizens had been removed from Texas voter rolls prior to 2024. The governor’s office later edited its own press release to describe those removed as “potential” noncitizens. A joint investigation by Votebeat, Texas Tribune and ProPublica later found Abbott’s numbers were inflated and, in some instances, wrong.


In reality, the state removed only 581 people as noncitizens over three years. The rest of the 6,500 had simply failed to respond to a notice asking them to confirm their citizenship, which doesn’t mean they weren’t citizens. The newsrooms’ investigation found that some eligible citizens had been flagged as potential noncitizens and removed from the rolls.



Then the time before that Texas was sued and lost for their claim


The state action echoed a scandal from 2019, when the Secretary of State’s Office announced that it had identified 95,000 registered voters as potential noncitizens and said that more than half of them had previously cast ballots. But the assertions didn’t hold up. Many of the voters in question turned out to be naturalized citizens flagged due to outdated data, and the state ultimately settled a related lawsuit by agreeing to new procedures.
 
Yes.


Convictions:


And that's just the tip of the Iceberg. We know that for every conviction for vote-fraud, thousands of cases are known to have existed, but there is not enough evidence to convict a particular individual. There is enough evidence to know that the vote-fraud occurred, but the lines were deliberately blurring, to convict a particular illegal, who always hide their identity, with the crime.




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Ya no one should believe a word of what you say or Texas officials say until verified by a Court or other body.

You show that in the very examples you post where both Magats and Texas officials WRONGLY apply their findings, discretion and standards and get thrown out of court once they get there.

There is no bigger example of how incredibly political and disgusting Texas officials are then the charging of the woman who was paroled from prison, told by various election officials she could vote and was clear to vote but upon registering was rejected from the rolls and DID NOT VOTE, and yet Texas rescinded her parole and threw her back in jail, until finally the courts threw out that travesty.

You cannot say a person had any intent to break the law when she sought out advice from Voting officials as to whether she could vote and was told yes.

But the system worked and application to vote was denied and Texas charged her anyway proving they are dishonest up and down the chain.
 
after arresting a guy for running the school district in the largest community in Iowa and arresting a cop in one of the largest metro areas in the world - both for being illegal and hiding in plain site - the lie about how they don't or can't vote was put to rest for good.

the gas lighting shit stains will keep trying to carry the lie of course
 
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