Richmond, Virginia – Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections (“RITE”), a non-profit organization whose mission is to protect election integrity and ensure elections officials follow the law, has written Virginia elections officials requesting immediate action to stop Prince William County from ignoring a Virginia law that safeguards the Commonwealth’s elections from non-citizen voting.
Under Virginia law, election officials are required to challenge any voter who they suspect of being a non-citizen. Challenged individuals may still vote so long as they sign a statement affirming, under oath, that they are citizens.
Recently, however, Prince William County published an operations manual that ignores this requirement. The Prince William County manual directs election officials to allow persons who present Driver Privilege Cards (“DPCs”), which are issued exclusively to non-citizens, to vote without challenge, so long as they also present some other form of identification. This is unlawful.
A person’s possession of a DPC is more than enough reason to suspect that he or she is a non-citizen. After all, a person must be a non-citizen to receive a DPC in the first place. Except for a United States passport, other forms of identification, including driver’s licenses, paychecks, bank statements, and utility bills, are not evidence that a person who possesses a DPC has become a citizen.
RITE has requested that Virginia election officials take immediate action to correct this situation in Prince William County by notifying the county of its obligation to challenge voters who present DPCs. It has also requested that she issue guidance to other counties to ensure they do not make a similar error.
“The Youngkin administration has made great progress in protecting Virginia’s elections from non-citizen voting. Undertaking the actions RITE has requested would further this work and give the Commonwealth’s citizens even more reason to have faith and trust in this year’s elections,” said Derek Lyons, President and CEO of RITE. “Virginia law is clear that election officials must challenge anyone suspected of being a non-citizen. When a person presents a document issued only to non-citizens, the only reasonable conclusion is to suspect that the person is not a citizen. Unless that person also presents a United States passport, election officials have a legal duty to require a signed, sworn statement attesting to citizenship before allowing that person to participate in the Commonwealth’s elections.”
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