As President Trump announced in his talk on Thursday evening, Democrat controlled states are refusing to hand over their list of registered voters so the list of non-citizens who are registered to vote will be incomplete. But the numbers for these four states are still substantial, though just because they are registered doesn’t mean that they voted.
DHS estimates there may be as many as 190,832 noncitizens registered to vote in California, 35,152 in New Jersey, 15,903 in Nevada and 14,576 in Pennsylvania.
In ten states, DHS found over 400,000 deceased registrants. Other states such as Georgia had 2,549 non-citizens registered, Tennessee 1,009, Texas 2,296, North Carolina 1,599, and Missouri 1,112.
The 2024 Pennsylvania U.S. Senate race where Republican Dave McCormick defeated incumbent Democrat Bob Casey Jr. was decided by 15,115 votes (McCormick: 3,399,295; Casey: 3,384,180; margin ~0.22%), so that is very close to the 14,576 registered non-citizens.
In the North Carolina Supreme Court race, the Democrat candidate there won by just 734 votes, so it is quite possible that non-citizens illegally voting in that race could have made a difference. The number of non-citizens registered to vote was twice that difference.
The 2024 U.S. Senate race in Nevada was determined by 24,059 votes, which is more than the 15,903 non-citizens that they identified as registered to vote.
There are other states that were close that estimates weren’t provided by the Department of Homeland Security.
Michigan U.S. Senate: Democrat Elissa Slotkin over Republican Mike Rogers by ~19,006 votes — 2,712,686 to 2,693,680.
Wisconsin U.S. Senate: Democrat Tammy Baldwin over Republican Eric Hovde by ~28,781 votes — 1,672,777 to 1,643,996.






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