
Despite Democrat claims, we are still finding noncitizens on voter rolls
By Easton Martin | October 22, 2025
Texas officials recently announced that more than 2,700 potential noncitizens were found registered to vote following a review of the state’s voter rolls. The discovery came after the Secretary of State’s office cross-checked the voter list with federal immigration data through the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program. Governor Greg Abbott called the finding proof that Texas is right to take election integrity seriously.
The news directly challenges a talking point long repeated by many Democratic leaders and media outlets that noncitizen voting is so rare it is virtually nonexistent. While some may try to dismiss the findings as insignificant, the fact remains that these names were discovered through official verification, not speculation. Even if only a small percentage of the 2,700 were to cast ballots, it would represent votes unlawfully counted in races often decided by razor-thin margins.
Texas officials emphasized that the process allows anyone flagged to verify their citizenship within 30 days before being removed from the rolls. That safeguard ensures legitimate voters are protected while ineligible registrations are corrected. The state says it will continue to audit voter rolls regularly to prevent noncitizens, deceased individuals, and duplicate records from distorting its voter database.
This is not an isolated case. Similar findings have surfaced in states like Arizona, Georgia, and Florida, all of which have taken steps to identify noncitizens and clean up registration lists. These results show that vulnerabilities do exist and that active monitoring is necessary to maintain trust in the electoral process.