I was wondering how long it would take you to bring this up.
Texas is claiming to have identified 58,000 people who
at one point were non-citizens and who have voted. But the data spans at least twenty-two years, so before they can come to any conclusions they need to identify which of those people naturalized between the time they were recorded as non-citizens and the time they voted.
State officials looked at two sets of data for their current investigation: the names of people who provided documents indicating they were not citizens when they obtained a driver’s license or a state ID, and the names of people who registered to vote.
That resulted in a list of 95,000 people with a current driver’s license or state ID who also had a voter registration record in Texas. Of those, 58,000 people voted in elections back to 1996, said Sam Taylor, a spokesman for the secretary of State.
But the same advisory that is the source of those numbers urged caution in interpreting them, using all capital letters to describe the similar records as "WEAK matches." The announcement didn’t say 58,000 noncitizens definitely voted.
Voting rights advocates raised a key concern about the data: driver’s license data may not reflect a person’s current citizenship status.
"Indeed, between 52,000-63,000 are naturalized every year in Texas," Texas Civil Rights Project spokesman Zenén Jaimes Pérez told PolitiFact.
We asked the Secretary of State’s office if it’s possible that some of the people in the 58,000 or 95,000 groups have since become citizens.
"That’s up to the county voter registrars and/or the Attorney General’s office to determine," Taylor responded.
On Jan. 28, county election officials across Texas were starting the process of examining the information from the state. So far, it is too early to determine if those on the list are actual noncitizen voters, said Chris Davis, the head of the Texas Association of Elections Administrators and the administrator in Williamson County.
Sourcehttps://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/4-Indicted-in-North-Texas-Voter-Fraud-Scheme-497239441.html
Annachie...voter fraud!
You'll notice that there was only one case of actual voter fraud in this article. And voter ID wouldn't have stopped it anyway.
http://www.capoliticalreview.com/capoliticalnewsandviews/if-san-fran-is-so-great-why-is-everyone-i-love-leaving/
LA County?
What do you think this proves?