Press Releases
Study Finds 5,000 Non-Citizens Likely Voted in Colorado
March 9, 2011
Chairman of House Subcommittee on Elections Pledges Review of Voter Registration Processes After a Recent Study by Colorado Secretary of State Revealed 12,000 Non-Citizens Registered to Vote in 2010 Elections and 5,000 Likely Voted
WASHINGTON – Today, Subcommittee on Elections Chairman Gregg Harper, R-Miss., issued the following statement announcing a review of state voter registration processes after a recent Colorado study revealed that as many as 5,000 non-citizens voted in Colorado during the 2010 elections:
"This report is extremely troubling and cause for a thorough review of the current registration processes implemented across the country, which I guarantee will be a priority for this Subcommittee. It also calls into question each state's ability to enforce current voting laws and whether or not we need to pursue additional measures to better protect the integrity of our electoral process."
According to the study conducted by the Colorado Secretary of State in conjunction with the state's Department of Motor Vehicles, 11,805 non-citizens registered to vote in the 2010 elections and 4,947 likely voted. The report also finds that without access to federal citizenship data, the state is unable to identify and remove non-citizens from its voter rolls.