An astonishing case of election fraud has surfaced, leaving many in disbelief. A Mexican citizen was caught voting illegally multiple times in U.S. elections, culminating in his arrest after being re-elected as mayor. This incident sheds light on the broader issue of non-citizen voting in the United States.
- Joe Se-Buy-os, a citizen of Mexico, was arrested for election fraud after being re-elected as mayor of Coldwater, Kansas.
- The Kansas Secretary of State revealed the use of a federal database to uncover non-citizen voting, indicating this case is only the beginning.
- The SAVE Act, aimed at requiring proof of citizenship for voter registration, faces opposition in the Senate despite passing in the House.
Yes, you heard that right. A citizen of Mexico was caught illegally voting multiple times in U.S. elections. Joe Se-Buy-os, re-elected as mayor of Coldwater, has been arrested and charged with six felonies for election fraud the day after his victory. Se-Buy-os, who has no party affiliation, was elected in a nonpartisan race typical of local elections in Kansas, a conservative area where nearly 85 percent voted for Trump in November. Regardless of his political ties, non-citizens cannot vote or run for office in Kansas. Facing over five years in prison and up to $200,000 in fines, Se-Buy-os's case reflects a broader issue nationwide.
Kansas Secretary of State Scott Schwab disclosed that this case is just the tip of the iceberg. The Trump administration's implementation of the SAVE database, a federal system verifying citizenship, has allowed Kansas to cross-reference voter rolls with immigration records. The findings are startling, with Schwab acknowledging his initial skepticism about non-citizen voting until the database revealed otherwise. Attorney General Kobach is now preparing for a busy workload as more cases are uncovered. This small-town mayor's arrest is merely the beginning of a larger discovery.
This incident underscores the critical need for proof-of-citizenship voting. Texans recently voted on a constitutional amendment requiring proof of citizenship for all voters, a measure that passed overwhelmingly. Texas joins eight other states, including Kansas, in passing similar laws, although only Arizona, New Hampshire, Ohio, and Wyoming have successfully implemented them due to judicial challenges. The persistence of illegal voting in a small Kansas town suggests a much larger problem in urban centers and blue states across the nation.
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The Heritage Foundation has compiled a database documenting over 1,400 proven cases of election fraud, including non-citizen voting, highlighting only a fraction of the actual occurrences. The likelihood of undetected fraud in larger urban areas, where Democrat leaders may turn a blind eye, is significant according to their findings.
A viable solution exists: the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act (SAVE Act). This Republican-backed legislation mandates documentary proof of U.S. citizenship for federal election voter registrations. Acceptable documents include a REAL ID-compliant license, a U.S. passport, birth certificate, or naturalization papers. Standard driver's licenses would no longer suffice, effectively ending department of motor vehicles voter drives that register anyone. The bill also requires states to audit voter rolls using federal databases, as Kansas has done, to remove non-citizens.
However, Democrats are blocking the SAVE Act through the Senate filibuster, stalling legislative progress. Although the House passed the SAVE Act in April with some bipartisan support, it remains gridlocked in the Senate. A few Democrats, like John Fetterman, might cross the aisle, but not enough to meet the 60-vote threshold. Meanwhile, red states like Texas are taking steps to safeguard voter integrity.
Our election system should not rely on mere trust but on verification. This Kansas case proves that without proper safeguards, non-citizens will vote and, incredibly, even get elected. The pressing question remains: how many more are out there?
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