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A Nevada Republican has wrongly suggested that the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles is swelling the voter rolls with immigrants who are in the country illegally. The claim was floated on Aug. 9 during a podcast by Steve Bannon, a one-time adviser to former President Donald Trump. Bannon said mass illegal immigration has created a problem with voting. He invited Jim Marchant, the Republican candidate for Nevada secretary of state, to discuss the illegal alien invasion. Marchant then suggested that the Nevada secretary of state and officials at the Department of Motor Vehicles allow people who are in the country illegally to join the voter rolls. The illegal aliens that are coming in are a huge issue when it comes to voting, Marchant said during the podcast. Here in Nevada, the DMV registers everybody, and so that means illegals. They don’t check. They are relying on the secretary of state to do the checking and either kick them off the voter rolls or not, which they are not doing. But that’s not true. The Nevada DMV takes several steps to prevent noncitizens from registering to vote. Marchant, a former Nevada state assemblyman, said during the podcast that if he’s elected, he will ensure only U.S. citizens register to vote. But he didn’t explain how he would accomplish that and whether his steps would differ from the ones government officials already take. Marchant will face Democrat Cisco Aguilar, a lawyer and former Nevada Athletic Commission appointee, in a November race to replace current Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske, a Republican, who is term-limited. Marchant leads a national coalition of candidates running on the falsehood that the 2020 presidential election was stolen by President Joe Biden. Marchant wants to eliminate voting by mail except for limited exceptions, such as military personnel. Michael Kagan, director of an immigration law clinic at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said there is no evidence of widespread voting by noncitizens. Although isolated and random violations happen with voting, including with citizens, I am not aware of any evidence that undocumented immigrants are registering to vote or trying to vote systematically or in any numbers, Kagan said. DMV takes steps to only allow citizens to submit voter registration In 2018, Nevada voters approved a ballot initiative establishing a system to automatically register eligible persons to vote when they apply for or renew driver’s licenses at the DMV. Eligible persons must be U.S. citizens. Individuals also can decline to register. Nevada launched automatic voter registration in 2020, a system used by about two dozen states. Nevada DMV spokesperson James DeHaven said that prospective voters must first complete an application that requires them to disclose their citizenship status. Applicants sign the form, which says that any misstatement of facts is criminal, potentially a felony. Customers are not processed for voter registration if: They say they are not U.S. citizens; They say they were born outside the U.S.; They present immigration documents as proof of identity; They are applying for a driver authorization card, which is for noncitizens. DMV staff members are required to explain the voter registration process in detail to each customer. The DMV does not register people to vote; it passes their registration information to election officials. And the DMV is not the only place people can fill out a voter registration form — they can also apply at county offices, through the mail or online. Marchant’s claim echoes statements by Trump allies after 2020 election Marchant did not respond to emails seeking evidence for his claim. But his statement echoes those Trump and his allies made in 2020, after the former president lost Nevada by about 34,000 votes. Trump tweeted in December 2020 that thousands of noncitizens had voted in Nevada. That same month, a few former Republican officials sued Secretary of State Cegavske, alleging that she had failed to keep noncitizens off the voter rolls. The case was filed by former Attorney General Adam Laxalt, who is now running for U.S. Senate; it was withdrawn a few months later. The lawsuit pointed to anecdotal evidence about a few noncitizens who either voted or were allegedly on the voter rolls over the past decade. Laxalt’s dropped lawsuit said an analysis showed many noncitizens may have voted in the recently concluded 2020 election. That was a reference to an allegation in a separate lawsuit filed on behalf of electors for Trump. In the lawsuit filed on behalf of Trump electors, Republicans compared the DMV files with voter registration records and said they found about 4,000 matches correlating with noncitizens who voted illegally. That lawsuit included multiple allegations of voter fraud, but the courts said the allegations were not credible and dismissed the case. The state DMV told the Nevada Independent that the residents could have become citizens and not updated their driver’s license records. Cegavske investigated the allegation about 4,000 noncitizens voting in the 2020 election and released her findings in April 2021. She, too, found people on the voter rolls who registered with immigration paperwork; however, she said that thousands of immigrants become citizens each year. Cegavske concluded that without specific evidence to identify people who were foreign nationals when they voted, there was nothing further to investigate. PolitiFact has found anecdotal evidence of noncitizens on the voter rolls in multiple states, but the incidents are rare and would not tilt a statewide election’s outcome. Noncitizens who vote face high risks: They may be deported or incarcerated, or they may undermine their efforts to apply for naturalization. Our ruling Marchant said, Here in Nevada, the DMV registers everybody (to vote) and so that means illegals. They don’t check. His comments imply that state officials routinely allow immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally to register to vote. He provided no evidence for his claim. The DMV takes steps to allow only eligible citizens to fill out voter registration paperwork, which includes completing a form declaring citizenship status. Applicants who present immigration documents are not processed for voter registration. We rate this statement False. PolitiFact researcher Caryn Baird contributed research for this article. RELATED : JD Vance’s ad about ‘open border’ and immigrant voters is wrong RELATED : Factchecking Arizona’s Blake Masters’ claim of open borders and Democratic amnesty plans RELATED : How ‘stop the steal’ Republicans seeking office hope to restrict voting
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