Nope. |
Except you have to be US citizen to vote, duh. |
And he's caught and being prosecuted.
Did Governor Youngkins son, who tried to vote illegally when he was 17, get prosecuted? |
Insane! How does the vote count if hes not allowed to vote. |
Hes not a us citizen and can't legally vote. You don't know this??? |
He was only caught because he turned himself in. There could be thousands of non-citizens voting undetected. This case proves how easy it is for non-citizens to vote. Our election security is embarrassing, because of Democrat efforts to undermine the integrity of our elections. |
The ID part is meaningless. As a green card holder, he could have gotten a license. It's the other documentation that got him registered. It was a failure, but no one has ever claimed they don't happen. Just that it's rare.
Buckle up people. We're going to be hearing lots of these random stories making it seem like it's a big thing as the trumpers try to get their "the election was stolen!" arguments in order after he loses next week |
Did you miss that the state didn’t catch this and his illegal vote still counts? |
It doesn't prove anything because we don't know HOW he got registered yet. |
People have claimed on this board that no one would ever take the risk of voting as a noncitizen for fear of prosecution. |
Yes we do. “He registered to vote on Sunday using his UM student identification and other documentation establishing residency in Ann Arbor, he signed a document identifying himself as a U.S. citizen and his ballot was entered into a tabulator, according to the Secretary of State's office.“ |
F&M organized OOS students to vote in Pennsylvania, so this is not surprising. Lots of international students at American universities and no reason they would be excluded from these clubs. The schools don’t face liability for illegally registering voters. |
And the vast majority of them wouldn't. I also like to say that the vast majority of people won't shut on the salad bar at Ponderosa for fear of prosecution, but sure. Yeah. I am sure you can find a few people who share in salad bars. Exceptions prove the rule. |
So yes, your previous claim was incorrect. |
I meant we don't know what other documents he used to "prove" his residency and citizenship. He could just as easily done the same thing with a state issued drivers license. We have no idea where the pressure points of failure actually was. |