Politics

Texas Elections Chief Tells Poll Workers To Give Ballots To People Who Show Noncitizen IDs

Published

on

New guidance from Texas Secretary of State Jane Nelson directs election workers to accept noncitizen driver’s licenses as voter identification, despite the fact that noncitizens are ineligible to vote in American elections.

Guidance issued Tuesday by Nelson’s office and initialed by Director of Elections Christina Adkins instructs poll workers to give a regular ballot to individuals who are on the voter rolls even if they present a limited-term driver’s license or ID card as their form of identification. The Texas Department of Public Safety issues “limited-term driver’s licenses” or identification cards to individuals who are legally residing in the state but are not citizens. The license and identification card are denoted by either “Temporary Visitor” or “Limited-Term.”

The guidance instructs election officials to “inform” the individual that the “identification presented suggests that the individual is not a United States citizen” and that it is illegal for noncitizens to vote.

After hearing such information, “If the individual does not have further questions or concerns and wishes to proceed to vote, the individual should be offered a regular ballot,” the guidance states.

There are approximately 2,824,613 noncitizens in Texas who have driver’s licenses, identification cards, or commercial driver’s licenses, according to Rep. Chip Roy. The Federalist reached out to the Texas Department of Safety for a further breakdown of the numbers but did not receive a response by publication time.

The guidance advises election workers to remember that “it is possible the individual became a naturalized United States citizen after the limited-term

CLICK HERE to read the rest of this ARTICLE. This post was originally published on another website.

Trending

Exit mobile version