Poll shows most voters are concerned illegal aliens are registered to vote

A recent survey shows a majority of voters are worried about illegal aliens voting in this year's election.

Rasmussen Reports surveyed over 1,000 likely voters and found that 55 percent of them believe it's likely that non-citizens and illegal aliens are registered to vote. 32 percent of those surveyed said it was "very likely" and 23 percent said "somewhat likely." Just 37 percent said it was less than likely that non-citizens are illegally registered to vote where they live.

This has been a cause for concern for Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton for quite some time now.

"I have no doubt there's a reason these people were brought here and I believe it was voting," Paxton said in a recent appearance on Fox News.

Furthermore, Paxton said from the very beginning, the Biden-Harris White House was working closely with the cartels to let millions of people come into the country illegally and eventually become voters in the U.S.

"They were telling the cartels 'get them here' and 'we want these people here as fast as possible and we want as many as possible,'" he claimed.

In states with Democrat governors like California, Illinois and New York, illegal aliens are able to obtain social security numbers and then driver licenses, leading to them being able to register to vote.

"They don't have to prove citizenship," said Paxton, who according to him only three states have laws that require proof of citizenship.

Less than three months remain until the election. Paxton said they need the federal government to cooperate with them so they can compare voter rolls and figure out who's a legal citizen and who's not.


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