Former DOJ Official: Non-Citizens Registered
To Vote through Motor Voter Registration Forms Kerry Picket, 4/8/15
Local state government
officials are registering non-U.S. citizens as valid voters — even when the
non-citizens say they are not Americans on their voter registration forms, a
former Justice Department attorney tells The Daily Caller.J. Christian Adams, a former United States Department of Justice official in the Civil Rights Division will show the Supreme Court in a brief later this month that non-citizens are registering to vote through the government’s motor voter program. The motor voter act became law during the Clinton administration as an easier way to register voters through their local Department of Motor Vehicles offices, but Adams says the program is failing to weed out those who are not American citizens.
“The bigger problem is that when they get those drivers licenses, there’s a government social services agency that is compelled under motor voter to offer voter registration,” Adams says. “For example, I’m representing a client — the American Civil Rights Union. We’re about to file a brief to the Supreme Court that shows actual voter registrations of people who on their voter registration forms that they’re not citizens, but they’re still getting registered to vote.”
Adams says they are going to file documents showing the names and addresses of non-citizens who were registered to vote, despite marking on forms they were not Americans, in their brief. Adams notified the Justice Department’s voting section and public integrity offices of the issue in letters sent to both DOJ divisions, but he says they have not acted on the information. TheDC sent an inquiry to the DOJ, but did not receive a response.
“[These will be] the actual voter registrations forms through motor voter,” he said, noting, “The point is, because of motor voter in issuing these alien document cards, you’re going to have non-citizens moving on to the voter rolls. It’s inevitable,” said Adams noting, “The Justice Department protects the lawless, because there’s a political benefit to this administration to allow lawlessness to occur. Because if those people who lawlessly are on the voter rolls go to vote, there’s probably a 9 in 10 chance they’re voting for Democrats.”
Like other states, illegal
immigrants in California are flooding local DMV’s in an effort to get drivers
licenses. However, many states are not remarkably distinguishing the licenses
issued to both citizen and non-citizen alike, so it is difficult to see from an
issued license if an individual is an American or not.
States including Michigan, Maryland,
D.C., Illinois, California, Vermont, and Colorado are bucking a federal law
that requires their DMVs to issue explicitly different looking drivers licenses
to non-citizens from the licenses U.S. citizens received.
Former Federal Elections Commission
official Hans von Spakovsky told TheDC the federal government is making it
harder for the states to know who is a citizen of the U.S. and who isn’t.
“The whole problem is most states
are not issuing licenses that easily on their face show that the person holding
it is not a U.S. citizen and that’s going to make it much more difficult to
prevent people who are in the U.S. who are not citizens from illegally
registering and voting in an election,” von Spakovsky said.
Von Spakovsky adds the situation is
made even worse by the fact that under the president’s immigration
plan. The plan allows for social security numbers to be issued to
non-citizens and blocks efforts of state officials wanting to clean up their
voter rolls by asking for the last four digits of a person’s social security
number on their voter registration forms.
“If someone is here illegally and
they don’t have a social security number, that’s one way to prevent them from
illegally registering. It just makes it all the more difficult,” von Spakovsky
says of Obama’s immigration policy.
Secretaries of state from Kansas and
Ohio, along with von Spakovsky, testified before Congress in February detailing
the issues states are facing in terms of knowing who is eligible to vote.
Ohio, Georgia, and Arizona passed
state laws requiring one to provide proof of citizenship to register to vote,
but von Spakovsky says, “They’ve been having trouble getting that enforced and
they’re about to file an amicus brief with the Supreme Court.”
http://dailycaller.com/2015/04/08/former-doj-official-non-citizens-registered-to-vote-through-motor-voter-registration-forms/
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