So you really do think Biden received 81 million legitimate votes?
The burden of proof rests with you if you don't, Reggie.
...and that's the problem - you haven't any. No one does.
You see the thing is, Ragtard, that while the simple idea sounds fine, apparently you have great faith in government to handle things smoothly, efficiently, and in a timely manner. Such an interesting and curious admission for a radical anti big goobmint contard.
Congressional Republicans are once again prioritizing the
, legislation that would force Americans to show documents like a passport or birth certificate to register to vote. Our research shows that
American citizens lack ready access to these documents. The House has already passed yet another version of the bill, but so far it has stalled in the Senate. If the SAVE Act becomes law, it would block millions of eligible American citizens from voting.
State legislatures have recently passed three types of legislation, all premised on false claims about noncitizens on voting rolls:
- Laws that require every applicant to present a passport, birth certificate, or other citizenship documentation when they register to vote
- Laws that require some voters to present a passport, birth certificate, or other citizenship documentation, in some cases as a backstop after election officials verify applicants’ citizenship by cross-checking other data sources, a process that inevitably misidentifies some people as noncitizens because of flawed data
- Laws that call for aggressive purges using methods that will remove some eligible American citizens from the rolls
Recently Enacted Purge Laws
Several states have enacted laws that seek to aggressively remove alleged noncitizens from the rolls. Voter list maintenance is important. But when it is done too broadly, eligible American citizens who followed all the rules can be disenfranchised.
,
, and
have enacted laws in the last few years to require election officials to compare voter files with DMV citizenship records and remove voters identified as possible noncitizens. The states did not institute adequate safeguards to keep American citizens on the rolls. Although all except the Kansas law require officials to send cancelled voters a notice, such comparisons can leave a gap: Some people become citizens after getting their driver’s licenses. They may not return to the DMV and update their citizenship status until their licenses expire years later.
,
,
,
, and
have passed laws since 2022 that oblige state officials to compare voter rolls with
data and remove voters flagged as noncitizens. However, the SAVE program doesn’t include information on all U.S. citizens and recent changes increase the risk of misidentifying individuals.
A 2025
law creates an “unconfirmed” registration status when officials receive information from a “reliable” source that a voter is a noncitizen. People can confirm their status by providing “evidence” of citizenship. And in 2022,
began to allow voter purges based on information from state or national public safety databases indicating someone isn’t a citizen. Officials don’t have to notify affected voters. These laws, which codify the use of incomplete or flawed data, risk purging eligible American voters.