New Ad Campaign Reminds Non-Citizens in Spanish: ‘You Are Not Allowed to Vote’ in Federal Elections

A conservative political advocacy organization has launched Spanish-language advertisements reminding noncitizens that it’s illegal for them to vote in federal elections.

 

Matt Braynard is the former strategic director of Donald J. Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.

 

The group wants to expand into major markets such as Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

 

Braynard, in announcing a blitz of ads, said that “Non-citizens Voting in Federal Elections is Illegal Under the ‘Illegal Immigrant Reform and Responsibility Act’ of 1996.”

 

He claims that “there are still cases where it occurs, putting noncitizens in danger of facing serious criminal charges and affecting the results of our election.”

 

YouTube has posted an ad that reminds all Americans of the importance of voting in the November elections. If someone attempts to vote illegally, there will be serious consequences.

 

 

The narrator says in Spanish: “This is to remind all U.S. Citizens to vote in the next election.

 

The group also cites a peer-reviewed scientific study published in Electoral Studies, 2014, which found that non-citizens did, in fact, vote in U.S. elections.

 

According to the study, non-citizens voting “likely affected 2008 results including Electoral College Votes and the composition in Congress.”

 

 

The study also shows that “noncitizens prefer Democratic candidates to Republican candidates.”

 

Elon Musk has long argued that the Census counts illegal aliens. This affects the makeup of the Congress in blue states and encourages Democrats to continue open-border policies.

 

Musk had warned that “if Dems won the presidency, House & Senate, (with enough seats for a filibuster to be overcome),” they would grant citizenship to illegals. “America will become a one-party, deep socialist state.”

 

 

The Biden-Harris Administration has granted citizenship to immigrants at a speed not seen for over ten years.

 

According to Xiao Wang of Boundless, a firm that provides services to immigrants who are seeking assistance with the naturalization procedure, the urgency is intended to affect elections.

 

Wang, speaking to the New York Times, said that the surge in naturalization effectiveness isn’t only about clearing backlogs. It could also reshape the electorate just months before an important election. “Each citizenship application is a vote which could decide Senate seats or even the presidential election.”

 

For those who want fair elections, the idea of reshaping electorates is troubling.