Subject: Re: But noncitizens don't vote
Ponder this:

d. Remove ineligible voters, including felons and mentally incapacitated.

e. Remove individuals who are unable to verify that they are citizens to the
Department of Motor Vehicles from the statewide voter registration list, should
that individual either intentionally or unintentionally attempt to register to vote, in
accordance with federal and state law.

f. The Department of Elections compares the list of individuals who have been
identified as non-citizens to the list of existing registered voters and then
registrars notify any matches of their pending cancellation unless they affirm their
citizenship within 14 days.


So how many non-citizens have voted in the past elections? This should have been pointed out in the EO, and would have been an excellent and easy point to make since they could easily check the list. Since it wasn't pointed out - it was either not worth mentioning, or it was zero.

And how many people removed from the list as non-citizens, later proved their citizenship? Remains to be seen. And if they are citizens, but moved out of state, we'll never know.

But this also proves my point that you would be amazed at what they can find and eliminate off the voter rolls.

And this: Much more might be added along the same lines. In Ohio, the secretary of state announced in 2017 that a total of 821 non-citizens were found to have registered in the state over the previous five years, 126 of whom actually voted. That’s among an electorate of roughly 8 million. (Seven years later, a new probe has found another 137 registrations.) The recent Republican House witness cited numbers from suburban DC’s immigrant-heavy Fairfax County, Virginia, in which, he said, 278 noncitizen registrants had been identified of whom 117 had actually voted.
https://www.cato.org/blog/shed...

So Cato thinks the effect is closer to zero and definitely less than 1% - therefore no effect at all. It looks like Virginia is getting better at cleaning up it's voter roster.