America’s toddler-in-chief apparently remains consumed by his electoral loss in 2000. He continues to insist that the loss could not possibly have been legitimate–obviously, any loss or setback he experiences is clearly the result of nefarious doings on the part of his enemies. (Trump doesn’t have “opponents”–anyone who criticises or counters him is automatically an enemy to be demeaned and discredited.) Even when he wins, as–to America’s lasting shame–he did in 2024, he remains fixated on what appears to be a pathological need to erase past losses.
And so we are being treated to his continuing tantrum about the 2020 election, allied to an obvious efforts to prevent GOP losses in the upcoming midterms.
Normal people can be forgiven for finding this fixation tedious, and shrugging it off as additional evidence of Trump’s mental illness and increasing inability to conduct himself as an adult. Interestingly, however, election officials in several states have conducted studies focused on one of his most persist claims–that his loss was attributable to voting by hordes of “illegals”–and that massive voting by non-citizens continues to threaten free and fair elections.
The New York Times recently published an op-ed reporting on the results of those studies.
As the essay notes, charges that noncitizens are illegally casting ballots have become commonplace. On X, Elon Musk claims that significant numbers of illegal immigrants vote. Rudy Giuliani charged that there were “probably about 250,000” votes from noncitizens in 2020 in Arizona–a state that requires proof of citizenship to vote. Unsurprisingly, there is no evidence to support those and similar allegations. Even the pro-Trump Heritage Foundation could come up with only 24 instances of noncitizens voting in U.S. elections in the ten-year span between 2003 and 2023.
More recently, several states have investigated these allegations of noncitizen voting by cross-checking their voter registration rolls with citizenship status. Their conclusion: non-citizen voting is virtually nonexistent.
Utah has approximately 2.1 million registered voters, among whom the study found one “confirmed noncitizen.” “And that one noncitizen, while registered, had never voted.”
Idaho has one million voters. When the state ran a similar test in 2024, they uncovered 36 “very likely” registered noncitizens. Thirty-six! As the secretary of state reported “out of the million-plus registered voters we started with, we’re down to 10 thousandths of one percent” of the overall count–assuming all of those registered actually voted. (Some elections are close, but hardly close enough to be affected by ten thousandths of a percent–even if one assumes that all 36 individuals voted and voted alike.)
Louisiana’s investigation in 2025 identified some 390 noncitizen registrants, “79 of whom had voted in at least one election over the last several decades (out of 2.9 million registrants).” Montana found 23 “possible” noncitizen registrants out of the state’s 785,000 people registered to vote. And Georgia’s 2024 audit found 20 registered noncitizens out of the 8.2 million who were registered.
The Republican author of the essay writes that he spent four years overseeing voter registration in Maricopa County; in those four years, he had come across “a total of two possible instances of noncitizens voting out of some 2.5 million registered voters.”
Some politicians are trying to exploit even these small numbers. In Michigan, the Macomb County clerk, Anthony Forlini, who is running for the top election office in the state, the secretary of state, recently announced to great fanfare that he’d found 15 noncitizens on his county’s voter rolls of over 724,000 registered voters. The incumbent secretary of state, Jocelyn Benson, then tasked her team with investigating the 15 files. It found that three of the people were U.S. citizens, four were previously removed from voter rolls, four were under further investigation and four do seem to be noncitizens.
Rather obviously, these constant accusations about noncitizen voting are an effort to score political points with low-information MAGA voters. But as the author notes, these allegations come at a real cost–they erode Americans’ confidence in the integrity of elections and they are an insult to the hard-working public servants who routinely oversee and guarantee our free and fair elections.
But as he also notes, and as so many of us fear, these accusations aren’t just “part of the broader story he’s concocted to avoid accepting that he lost to Joe Biden in 2020.” They are also a threat to this fall’s midterm elections.
That threat isn’t a miniscule number of votes cast by non-citizens. The danger comes from the craven Republican politicians bending their knees to our mad would-be King–and thereby facilitating his corrupt and fraudulent efforts to cling to power.
Good government folks are preparing to protect the midterms, but a truly massive turnout–a huge Blue Wave–is the only sure-fire way to stymie these efforts.
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