Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, joined by 15 other state attorneys general, sent a letter to Biden-Harris Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, demanding that DHS fulfill its legal obligation to assist states in verifying the citizenship of registered voters.
On October 7, Paxton formally requested the federal government provide data on the citizenship status of individuals who may have illegally registered to vote in Texas. Paxton attached a list of approximately 450,000 voters who registered without presenting a state-issued driver’s license or ID, meaning their citizenship status had not been confirmed. This request triggered the federal government’s legal duty to respond. Several other states have made similar demands to ensure the accuracy of their voter rolls.
However, the Biden-Harris government has not granted states access to the federal databases needed to verify noncitizens are not on voter rolls. While federal law makes it illegal for noncitizens to register to vote, vetting is weak. Courts have ruled that states cannot require proof of citizenship for voter registration. As a result, states must rely on federal databases to verify citizenship status.
In the letter, Paxton and the other attorneys general expressed frustration with DHS’s delayed responses, accusing the agency of failing to grant access to its Person Centric Query Service (PCQS) database, which is essential for verifying voter registration information. They argued that DHS is legally required to provide the information, regardless of its opinion on the usefulness of the data.
“Secretary Mayorkas owes every state the requested information without delay. They are legally obligated to assist in ensuring noncitizens are not registering or voting in American elections,” Paxton insists.
Despite the ban on noncitizen voting, research suggests foreigners do vote in U.S. elections, mainly for Democrats and in numbers significant enough to change the outcome.