At
least 86 non-citizens have been registered voters in Philadelphia since
2013, and almost half — 40 — even voted in at least one recent
election, according to a legal group that sued to get voter registration
records.
Joseph
Vanderhulst, an attorney with the Public Interest Legal Foundation,
noted Philadelphia knows about those 86 illegal voters only because
officials received specific requests — in almost every case from the
voters themselves — to remove the names from the rolls. He said there is
no way to know how many non-citizens might be registered to vote in
Philadelphia, let alone in the rest of politically crucial Pennsylvania.
“This is just the tip of the iceberg. Who knows how many are on and don’t ask to be taken off?”
“This is just the tip of the iceberg,” he said. “Who knows how many are on and don’t ask to be taken off?”
Research
by the law firm also indicated that Philadelphia makes no effort to
proactively remove non-citizens or incarcerated felons, who also are
ineligible to vote under Pennsylvania law.
Philadelphia becomes the latest jurisdiction that the Public Interest Legal Foundation has revealed to have irregularities in the voter rolls. The group recently found 1,046 non-citizens who
had been registered to vote in eight Virginia counties and that nearly
200 cast ballots between 2005 and 2015.Asked how ineligible voters could
be registered in Philadelphia, a city elections official, who did not
identify himself, said, “I have no idea what they’re talking about. No,
there aren’t,” before abruptly hanging up the phone.
Vanderhulst
said the legal foundation encountered indifference and outright
hostility when lawyers began seeking information. The group made a
request under the Help America Vote Act in January. After the city
ignored the request, the firm sued. The information that the city
ultimately provided shows that:
- The city canceled 23 registered voters in 2015. Of that group, seven voted in past elections, and three had been registered for more than a decade.
- The city canceled 30 registered voters in 2014. Of that group, 18 had voted in past elections, and eight had been registered for at least a decade.
- The city canceled 33 registered voters in 2013. Of that group, 15 had voted in past elections, and six had been registered for at least a decade.
According
to the report, 59 of the ineligible voters were Democrats, six were
Republicans, and 21 were members of minor parties or unaffiliated.
Requests
by the ineligible voters to be removed from the rolls included those
who indicated that they had mistakenly marked boxes indicating that they
were eligible voters when applying for driver's licenses. In some
instances, voters marked "no" on the forms but got voter registration
cards anyway. In another case, a voter indicated that he had been on the
rolls for the previous five years despite repeated efforts to be
removed.
Vanderhulst said city officials indicated they err on the side of registering voters.
"If
the checked [citizenship] boxes are blank, they still register them,"
he said. "That's how these people are getting on the rolls … It's just
too easy. Maybe it's supposed to be easy — but the price of that seems
to be no discretion on the front end."
Vanderhulst
said he suspects other Pennsylvania counties operate in a similar
manner, and therefore have irregularities in their voter registration
rolls. He pointed to the National Voter Registration Act of 1993,
designed to make motor-vehicle offices one-stop shops for driver's
licenses and voter registration cards. But since non-citizens can get
driver's licenses, that has led to confusion, he said.
"My gut [feeling] on it is the culprit here is motor-voter [policies]," he said.
In
addition to non-citizens, the report also details that Philadelphia
officials make no effort to remove voters who have been imprisoned
for felonies or even move those names to the inactive-voter list.
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"City
of Philadelphia election officials behave as if Pennsylvania law
prohibiting certain felons from voting doesn't even exist," the report
states. "This is rank lawlessness."
Vanderhulst
said the law allows voters incarcerated on misdemeanor charges to
request absentee ballots to be sent to corrections facilities or halfway
houses, but felons cannot. He said elections officials in Philadelphia
have no way of knowing whether a request is legitimate or not.
With 49,914 prisoners in Pennsylvania in 2015, he said, there are many possibilities for illegal voting.
Progressive
activists and many academics continue to argue that voter fraud is a
myth propagated by conservatives whose true goal is to suppress
legitimate votes. But Vanderhulst said the reaction of Philadelphia
officials fits with a larger pattern: Elections authorities often fail
to examine the integrity of the voter rolls before elections or audit
the ballots cast after them.
And
in the rare instances in which people are found to have illegally
voted, prosecutions are rare. Vanderhulst said he is not aware of a
single instance in which Philadelphia elections officials referred a
case for prosecution.
The
evidence now should be clear that illegal voting is not something that
is so rare as to almost never occur, Vanderhulst said.
"It's basically just denial," he said.
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