Elon Musk is Right and the NY Times is Wrong About Illegal Voting By Non-Citizens

Overview

In a recent trio of posts to X, Elon Musk wrote that (1) illegal immigrants โ€œare not prevented from voting in federal elections,โ€ (2) โ€œyou donโ€™t need government issued ID to vote,โ€ and (3) Democrats โ€œare importing voters.โ€

To rebut those statements, the New York Times published an article by Jim Rutenberg and Kate Conger claiming that Musk is โ€œspreading election misinformationโ€ about โ€œillegal voting by noncitizensโ€ and echoing a โ€œconspiracy theoryโ€ spread by Donald Trump.

While Muskโ€™s words are imprecise, the gist of what he wrote is correct, and the Times is categorically wrong.

Illegal Voter Registration

In response to Muskโ€™s first two points, the Times argues that โ€œfederal law requires identification verification from voters when they register.โ€ The hyperlink in that sentence leads to a document by the liberal Brennan Center for Justice claiming that โ€œnew identification requirementsโ€ in a 2002 federal voting law โ€œmay severely threaten votersโ€™ rightsโ€ฆ.โ€

What the Times fails to reveal is that the Brennan Center document describes the identification requirements in the law, which donโ€™t require government-issued ID or proof of citizenshipโ€”just as Musk wrote. The document notes that even a โ€œutility billโ€ or โ€œbank statementโ€ is enough to comply with the law. The text of the 2002 legislation and the current U.S. election code law confirm this.

Furthermore, a 2013 Supreme Court ruling supports Musk and contradicts the Times by explaining that the National Voter Registration Form โ€œdoes not require documentary evidence of citizenship; rather, it requires only that an applicant aver, under penalty of perjury, that he is a citizen.โ€

In fact, the Courtโ€™s 2013 ruling blocked the state of Arizona from requiring โ€œdocumentary proof of citizenshipโ€ to register to vote. Likewise, a 2020 appeals court ruling prohibited other states from doing the same, and the Obama administration filed a brief arguing for that outcome.

To be clear, federal law and the laws of all 50 states require people to be U.S. citizens in order to register to vote in federal elections, and federal law forbids people from falsely claiming citizenship to register to vote. Penalties for lying about this include up to five years in prison. However, enforcement mechanisms for such laws are limited, and opportunities to get around them are ample.

The situation was summarized by Barack Obama shortly before the 2016 U.S. presidential election when actress Gina Rodriguez asked him if โ€œDreamersโ€ and โ€œundocumented citizensโ€ would be deported if they voted. Obama replied:

Not true. And the reason is, first of all, when you vote, you are a citizen yourself. And there is not a situation where the voting rolls somehow are transferred over, and people start investigating, etcetera.

After dodging the fact that โ€œDreamersโ€ and โ€œundocumented immigrantsโ€ are not citizens, Obamaโ€™s clear message was that there is no effective way to enforce the law that prohibits them from voting.

And when President Trumpโ€™s Advisory Commission on Election Integrity asked the states for โ€œdetailed, publicly available voter-roll dataโ€ that could be cross-checked against other databases with information on citizenship status, states refused to turn over the data and filed a flurry of lawsuits to stop the commission. In the words of Californiaโ€™s Secretary of State:

While the commission is allowed to request the personal data of California voters, they cannot compel me to provide it. Let me reassure California voters: I will not provide the Commission with any personal voter data. โ€ฆ

Yesterdayโ€™s ruling is merely the first in a string of lawsuits challenging the Commission. Those lawsuits send a strong messageโ€”the Commission will face opposition at every step of the way from those who are fighting to protect our voting rights, our privacy, and our democratic principles.

Note that California alleged the commission asked for โ€œpersonal data,โ€ but in reality, the commission explicitly requested โ€œpublicly available voter-roll data.โ€

Californiaโ€™s deceptive refusal of the request and the ample openings for non-citizens to vote take on added significance in light of the following testimony by California Senate Leader and Democrat Kevin De Leon in 2017:

I can tell you half of my family would be eligible for deportation under [Trumpโ€™s] executive order, because if they got a false Social Security card, if they got a false identification, if they got a false driverโ€™s license โ€ฆ if they got a false green card. And anyone who has family members who are undocumented knows that almost entirely everybody has secured some sort of false identification.

Illegal Voting

The Times also alleges that โ€œinstances of illegal voting by noncitizens are rareโ€ and supports that claim with a link to PolitiFactโ€”an outfit with a record of publishing flagrant falsehoods on illegal voting and many other issues.

Although data on violations of laws with weak enforcement mechanisms are rare, scientific surveys of non-citizens have found that roughly:

  • 13% of Hispanic non-citizens admitted they were registered to vote in 2013.
  • 14% of all non-citizens admitted they were registered to vote in 2012, and 9% stated โ€œI definitely votedโ€ in the 2012 U.S. presidential election.
  • 15% of all non-citizens admitted they were registered to vote in 2008, and 8% stated โ€œI definitely votedโ€ in the 2008 U.S. presidential election.

Those rates are only for self-admitted actions, and database matches with voting and registration records show the actual rates are about twice as high. In 2008, the one year for which Just Facts has full data, 27% of non-citizens were registered to vote, and 16% of them actually voted.

The studies that yielded the data above have significant margins of error due to relatively small sample sizes, and there are other sources of uncertaintyโ€”some of which may produce overcounts and some undercounts. But given that the Census Bureau estimates there are about 20 million non-citizen adults living in the U.S., a million illegal votes will be cast in every federal election if only 5% of them vote.

As summarized by a 2014 paper in the scholarly journal Electoral Studies, โ€œsome non-citizens participate in U.S. elections,โ€ and โ€œthis participation has been large enough to change meaningful election outcomes including Electoral College votes, and Congressional elections.โ€

Some media outlets and โ€œfact checkersโ€ have tried to contest those realities, but a multitude of facts from academic books and journals have shown that their arguments consist of mathematically illiterate notions, half-truths, and outright falsehoods. On top of this, one โ€œfact checkerโ€ leveled slanderous accusations against Ph.D. scholars who conducted and vetted seminal studies on this matter.

โ€œThe Great Replacementโ€

The Times also asserts โ€œMusk implied that Mr. Biden and the Democrats were being lax on immigration because โ€˜they are importing voters,โ€™ an echo of the โ€˜great replacementโ€™ conspiracy theory that Mr. Trump was sharing around the same time.โ€

The hyperlink in that sentence leads to another Times article that blames Republicans for spreading a โ€œGreat Replacementโ€ narrative โ€œused to justify an act of racist violenceโ€ in a mass murder of 10 people in a Buffalo supermarket during 2022.

The Times and other media outlets tar Republicans with such guilt-by-association tactics. However, the press gives itself a pass when similar atrocities are committed by people who parrot their false narratives.

The Times article doesnโ€™t even attempt to rebut Muskโ€™s point but simply calls it a โ€œconspiracy.โ€ However, multiple facts prove that what Musk wrote is true.

For example, 82% of non-citizens who said they voted in 2008 stated that they voted for Democrat Barack Obama, while only 18% said they voted for Republican John McCain.

Citing figures that would dwarf the number of non-citizens who vote illegally, Eliseo Medina, a former executive vice president of the Service Employees International Union, stated in a 2009 speech that:

  • the โ€œprogressive communityโ€ can โ€œexpand and solidify the progressive coalition for the futureโ€ by putting โ€œ12 millionโ€ unauthorized immigrants โ€œon the path to citizenship and eventually voting.โ€
  • turning illegal immigrants into citizens will create a progressive โ€œgoverning coalition for the long term, not just for an election cycle.โ€

Illegal immigrants and other non-citizens generally have low incomes and exceptionally high rates of not having a high school diploma. The majority of people with these attributes vote for Democrats.

The lopsided votes of non-citizens for Democrats are consistent with the promises and actions of Democrat politicians to give free healthcare, amnesty, and citizenship to people who immigrate to the United States, illegally or legally. The electoral implications of this are further highlighted by facts like these:

  • A nationally representative bilingual poll of 784 immigrant Latinos conducted by Pew Research in 2011 found that 81% said they would prefer โ€œa bigger government providing more services,โ€ and 12% said they would prefer โ€œa smaller government with fewer services.โ€ In stark contrast, 41% of the general U.S. population said they would prefer a bigger government, and 48% said they want a smaller one.
  • A 2012 poll of 2,900 immigrants who were U.S. citizens found that 62% identified as Democrats, 25% as Republicans, and 13% as Independents.
  • A nationally representative bilingual poll of 800 Hispanic adults conducted by McLaughlin & Associates in 2013 found that 59% were born outside the U.S., 53% considered themselves to be Democrats, 12% considered themselves to be Republicans, and 29% considered themselves to be independents or another party.

The fact that illegal immigration, amnesty, and legal immigration help the political prospects of Democrats is incontestable, not a conspiracy.

Conclusion

Beyond attacking Musk for posting genuine facts about illegal voting by non-citizens, the Times article complains that โ€œXโ€™s fact checkers are long goneโ€ and that the previous โ€œcomplaint line between the [Biden] campaign and the platform is dead.โ€

The Times bemoans those developments while failing to report that pre-Musk Twitter censored genuine facts and promoted demonstrable falsehoods about Russiagate, Hunter Bidenโ€™s laptop, Covid-19, and more.

In short, the New York Times is falsely accusing Elon Musk of the very thing that the Times and the previous owners of Twitter are guilty ofโ€”spreading misinformation.

By James D. Agresti

James D. Agresti is the president of Just Facts, a research institute dedicated to publishing facts about public policies and teaching research skills.

Just Facts Daily
Just Facts Dailyhttps://www.justfacts.com/
Just Facts Daily publishes comprehensive and rigorously documented facts about public policy issues for Just Facts, a research and educational institute.

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