Overview
Based on the latest available data and an enhanced version of a stress-tested methodology from a scholarly journal, a new study by Just Facts has found that about 10% to 27% of non-citizen adults in the U.S. are now illegally registered to vote.
The U.S. Census recorded more than 19 million adult non-citizens living in the U.S. during 2022. Given their voter registration rates, this means that about two million to five million of them are illegally registered to vote. These figures are potentially high enough to overturn the will of the American people in major elections, including congressional seats and the presidency.
Background
In 2014, the academic journal Electoral Studies published a groundbreaking study by three scholars who estimated how frequently non-citizens were illegally voting. Based on data for the 2008 presidential and congressional elections, the study found that:
- โroughly one quarter of non-citizensโ in the U.S. โwere likely registered to vote.โ
- โ6.4% of non-citizens actually voted.โ
- 81.8% of them โreported voting for Barack Obama.โ
- illegal votes cast by non-citizens โlikelyโ changed โimportant election outcomesโ in favor of Democrats, โincluding Electoral College votesโ and a โpivotalโ U.S. Senate race that enabled Democrats to pass Obamacare.
The studyโs voter registration rate was estimated with data from two key sources:
- A national survey in which 14.8% of non-citizens admitted that they were registered to vote.
- A database of registered voters that reveals what portion of the surveyed non-citizens โwere in fact registeredโ even though โthey claimed not to be registered.โ
By combining these data, the authorโs โbestโ estimate was that 25.1% of non-citizens were illegally registered to vote.
The authors calculated voter turnout with the same datasets, but their methodology yielded a best estimate that 6.4% of non-citizens voted in 2008โlower than the 8.0% of non-citizens who stated โI definitely votedโ and explicitly named the candidate they voted for. This and other matters led Just Facts to engage in extensive correspondence with the lead author of the study to verify practically every detail of it.
Just Facts then conducted a comparable study that used the same datasets, a more straightforward methodology, and related studies to constrain assumptions. This found that roughly 27% of non-citizens were registered to vote and about 16% of them voted in the 2008 national elections.
As is often the case with studies of illegal actions where enforcement is limited, both Just Factsโ study and the one from Electoral Studies have sizeable margins of uncertainty. This is due to relatively small sample sizes and other possible sources of errorโsome that could produce overcounts and others undercounts.
โFact Checksโ
So-called fact checkers and certain scholars have repeatedly tried to dispute the Electoral Studies paper and Just Factsโ study. However, their criticisms were mathematically illiterate and laced with unrealistic assumptions, empty arguments, half-truths, and outright falsehoods.
Now, the Washington Postโs lead โfact checker,โ Glenn Kessler, claims to have uncovered new evidence that undercuts the results of the 2014 Electoral Studies paper and Just Factsโ research. This consists of a previously sealed โExpert Reportโ on non-citizen voting for a 2023 Arizona court case.
Notably, the report was written by the lead author of the Electoral Studies paper, Dr. Jesse Richman, an Associate Professor of Political Science and International Studies at Old Dominion University.
In an article titled โThe Truth About Noncitizen Voting in Federal Elections,โ Kessler quotes several figures from Richmanโs 2023 report suggesting that about 1% of non-citizens are registered to vote. This is drastically below the โbestโ estimate of 25% from Richmanโs 2014 paper.
The glaring disparity between the 2014 and 2023 figures prompted Just Facts to scrutinize the methodologies used to produce them. This research revealed that all of the 1% figures are lowball estimates. This was confirmed when Just Facts questioned Richman, who responded:
An important element of context for the Arizona report is that it was written as an expert report in a court case (and indeed it was a confidential part of the case until it got subpoenaed). In that context my focus was on identifying and explicating the evidence most robust to cross-examination. Thus, my goal was to explain to the court the results and the datasets where as many possible counter-arguments concerning how the estimate could be biased upwards were closed off. Of course, no choice about which analyses to focus on comes without tradeoffs. And the tradeoff from focus on analyses where one can minimize the risk that the estimate could be biased upwards is that there is potentially an increased risk that the estimate could be biased downwards.
Beyond portraying minimums as best estimates, Kessler also misleads his readers with a half-truth that the 2014 paper estimated โ6.4 percent of noncitizens voted in 2008 and 2.2 percent voted in 2010.โ What Kessler fails to reveal is that 2010 was a mid-term election, and Richman explained in Kesslerโs newspaper that โthese are the patterns one would expect to see if the measures retained validity and non-citizens were a group mobilized more in presidential election years than midterms.โ
In another ruse, Kessler criticizes and links to a study by Just Facts while coyly describing it as the work of โone researcher.โ This avoids the scholarly track record of the organization and the fact that two Ph.D.โs who specialize in data analytics vetted the study and described it as โmethodologically sound,โ โfair in its conclusions,โ and โcredible.โ
Kessler also misreports the results of Just Factsโ study by claiming that it found non-citizens gave Biden โalmost an additional 18,000 votesโ in Arizona in 2020. In reality, the study plainly states that non-citizens gave Biden an โextraโ โ51,081 ยฑ 17,689โ votes in Arizona. This equals 33,000 to 69,000โnot 18,000.
Ironically, Donald Trump was indicted by a D.C. grand jury for accurately citing the lower bound of those figures.
The Latest Data & Study
The redeeming element of Kesslerโs article is that it alerted Just Facts to the existence of non-citizen voter registration data from 2022. This enabled Just Facts to update previous studies on this issue with the latest available information.
Using an enhanced version of the methodology that yielded the same โbestโ registration rate as the 2014 Electoral Studies paper, Just Factsโ new study finds that roughly 10% to 27% of non-citizen adults in the U.S. are now registered to vote.
The data and methodology of the study are detailed in this spreadsheet. Enhancements over previous studies include:
- a more precise formula to calculate sampling margins of error.
- the use of dual methodologies to account for varying possibilities.
- multiple citizenship questions in the survey that limit the possibility of honest mistakes by survey respondents.
As with other studies of illegal actions, there are uncertainties in the results. For example, the study assumes that all people who claim to be โcitizensโ in the survey actually are citizens. This is unlikely given that the journal Demographic Research published a study in 2013 which found that certain major groups of non-citizens often falsely claim to be citizens in Census surveys. If these dishonest survey respondents register to vote at higher or lower rates than other non-citizens, this could skew the results of the study.
Standards for high quality research require that assumptions be โexplicit and justifiedโ to provide โa fully ethical presentation of scientific data.โ This standard has been brazenly and repeatedly flouted by scholars who downplay voting by non-citizens. In contrast, the assumptions and justifications of Just Factsโ study are provided here.
Potential Impacts
In presidential elections, roughly half of non-citizens who are registered turn out to vote. Given that about 10% to 27% of them are currently registered, this means about 5% to 13% of them will illegally vote in the 2024 presidential and congressional elections.
The U.S. Census recorded a population of 19.7 million voting-age non-citizens in the U.S. during 2022. This is an absolute minimum because the Census doesnโt count masses of non-citizens who falsely claim to be citizens or donโt fill out Census surveys.
Also, the figure of 19.7 million doesnโt include multitudes of non-citizens whoโve entered since 2022. This includes people who legally immigrated, crossed the border illegally, or were allowed into the country under the Biden administrationโs parole policies.
Based on the data above, roughly 1.0 million to 2.7 million non-citizens will illegally vote in the 2024 presidential and congressional elections unless stronger election integrity measures are implemented.
Closing the Loopholes
To prevent illegal voting by non-citizens, Congressional Republicans recently introduced a 22-page bill to โrequire proof of United States citizenshipโ to register to vote in federal elections.
While reporting on a press conference announcing the legislation, media outlets like the Associated Press, CNN, NBC News, Rolling Stone, and NPR attacked the bill as unnecessary. NPR, for instance, reported that โitโs already illegalโ for non-citizens to vote in federal elections and โthereโs never been evidence to support the idea noncitizens are voting at anything other than miniscule numbers.โ
Those claimsโwhich echo the Biden administrationโs statement on this matterโare refuted by the Electoral Studies paper, Just Factsโ research, and the following facts that prove there are wide openings for non-citizens to vote.
Open Doors to Illegal Voting
All 50 states require people to be U.S. citizens in order to register to vote in federal elections, and federal law forbids non-citizens from falsely claiming citizenship to register to vote. However, enforcement mechanisms for such laws are limited, and opportunities to get around them are ample.
For a prime example, federal law requires all states to register voters for federal elections via a form developed by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. The form requires people to declare that they are U.S. citizens, but it doesnโt require them to prove it.
Several states, including Arizona and Georgia, tried to require people who register with the federal form to provide โdocumentary evidenceโ of citizenship, but they were blocked by court rulings supported by the Obama administration.
So instead of proof of citizenship, the federal form allows people to register and vote with assorted forms of โidentificationโ like a โutility billโ or โbank statement.โ
The federal form also has state-specific instructions which are rife with loopholes that could allow non-citizens to register. The instructions for New Jersey are typical of most states:
The last four digits of your Social Security number OR your New Jersey Driverโs License number is required for voter registration. If you do not possess either of these identifications, please write โNONEโ on the form. The State will assign a number that will serve to identify you for voter registration purposes.
Likewise, the NJ State formโwhich provides another avenue to register for federal electionsโcontains a checkbox that allows people to register without a Social Security or driverโs license number if they โprovide a COPY of a current and valid photo ID, or a document with your name and current address on it.โ This can be anything from a โstore membership IDโ or โstudent IDโ to a โrent receiptโ or โgovernment check.โ
Ignoring those facts, the New York Times recently criticized Elon Musk for saying that illegal immigrants โare not prevented from voting in federal electionsโ and โyou donโt need government issued ID to vote.โ
The Times claimed that Musk was wrong because โfederal law requires identification verification from voters when they register.โ That hyperlink leads to a document by the liberal Brennan Center for Justice which claims that โnew identification requirementsโ in a 2002 federal voting law โmay severely threaten votersโ rightsโฆ.โ
What the Times fails to reveal is that the Brennan Center describes the identification requirements in the law, which donโt require government-issued ID or proof of citizenshipโjust as Musk wrote. The Center even notes that a โutility billโ or โbank statementโ is enough to comply with the law. The text of the 2002 legislation and the current U.S. election code law confirm this.
The lack of enforcement against illegal voting by non-citizens was aptly summarized by Barack Obama shortly before the 2016 U.S. presidential election when actress Gina Rodriguez asked him if โDreamersโ and โundocumented 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 Dreamers and other unauthorized immigrants are not citizens, Obamaโs clear message was that there is no effective way to enforce the law that prohibits them from voting.
Republicans are proposing to fix that situation, while Democrats and the media are telling people it doesnโt exist despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
Identity Fraud
Even if the federal government or states adopted a law that requires official government IDs or Social Security numbers for voter registration, this wouldnโt constitute proof of citizenship because identity fraud is rampant among non-citizens.
For a prime example, the chief actuary of the U.S. Social Security Administration estimated in 2013 that:
- 0.7 million illegal immigrants worked in 2010 by using Social Security numbers obtained by using โfraudulent birth certificates.โ
- another 1.8 million illegal immigrants worked in 2010 by using Social Security numbers โthat did not match their name.โ
Likewise, a 2002 investigation by the U.S. Government Accountability Office found that โthe use of fraudulent documents by aliens is extensive.โ For instance, immigration officials in Los Angeles โseized nearly two million counterfeit documentsโ in November 1998, including โpermanent resident cards and Social Security cards, which were headed for distribution points around the country.โ
Similarly, the New York Times reported in 2005, โCurrently available for about $150 on street corners in just about any immigrant neighborhood in California, a typical fake ID package includes a green card and a Social Security card.โ
Perhaps most revealingly, California Senate Leader and Democrat Kevin De Leon publicly stated in 2017:
I can tell you half of my family would be eligible for deportation under [Trumpโs] executive order, because if they got a false Social Security card, if they got a false identification, if they got a false driverโs license โฆ 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.
Hiding the Data
In 2017, President Trumpโs Advisory Commission on Election Integrity asked the states for โdetailed, publicly available voter-roll dataโ that could be cross-checked against other databases with information on citizenship status. However, states refused to turn over the data and filed a flurry of lawsuits to stop the commission.
In the words of Californiaโs 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. โฆ
Yesterdayโs ruling is merely the first in a string of lawsuits challenging the Commission. Those lawsuits send a strong messageโthe 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 claims the commission asked for โpersonal data,โ but in reality, the commission explicitly requested โpublicly available voter-roll data.โ Californiaโs deceptive refusal of this request and the ample openings for non-citizens to vote take on added significance in the light of this next topic.
Who Do Non-Citizens Vote For?
In the 2008 presidential election, 82% of non-citizens who admitted that they voted stated that they voted for Democrat Barack Obama, while only 18% said they voted for Republican John McCain. Showing this was not a fluke, Richman found in multiple surveys conducted from 2006 to 2022 that 73% to 82% of non-citizens supported Democratic candidates.
Those outcomes accord with the promises and actions of Democrat politicians to give wide-ranging welfare and full amnesty to people who immigrate to the United States legally or illegally. The implications of this are further highlighted by facts like the following:
- A nationally representative bilingual survey of 784 immigrant Latinos conducted by Pew Research in 2011 found that 81% said they would prefer โa bigger government providing more services,โ and 12% said they would prefer โa 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.
- Surveys conducted by YouGov in 2008 and 2012 found that 60% to 71% of non-citizens identified as Democrats, while only 16% to 17% identified as Republicans.
- A nationally representative bilingual survey 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, and 12% considered themselves to be Republicans.
Conclusion
Every illegal vote cast by a non-citizen nullifies the legal vote of a citizen, thereby subverting their Constitutional right to vote.
A wealth of data and corroborating facts show that:
- non-citizens have ample openings to illegally vote.
- roughly 10% to 27% of them are registered to vote.
- about 5% to 13% of them vote in presidential elections.
- the vast bulk of them vote for Democrats.
Given the estimates above and the fact that more than 20 million non-citizen adults live in the U.S., roughly 1.0 million to 2.7 million of them will illegally vote in 2024 unless stronger election integrity measures are implemented. This could easily overturn the will of the American people in close major elections.
Instead of reporting these facts or mitigating this threat to every citizenโs right to vote, โfact checkers,โ major media outlets, and elected Democrats are denying this problem exists.
James D. Agresti is the president of Just Facts, a research and educational institute dedicated to publishing facts about public policies and teaching research skills.