While many disagree, a majority of Americans believe that illegal immigrant voting will be “common” around the nation in the 2024 presidential election and will likely affect the vote’s outcome, according to the most recent I&I/TIPP Poll.
The 1,244 Americans polled for the national online I&I/TIPP survey of voter opinion were asked: “How common do you think illegal immigrant voting will be in the November presidential elections?”
Of those responding, 52% said that they believed voting by those who immigrated to the U.S. illegally would be “common,” while just 38% thought such voting would either be “rare” (23%) or “none at all” (15%). Of the remaining, 11% said they “not sure.”
The poll of registered voters, taken from June 26-28, has a margin of error of +/-2.8 percentage points.
But the opinion was hardly uniform across the two main political parties, third parties and independents.
For instance, just 36% of Democrats thought that illegal immigrant voting would be common, while 51% said it wouldn’t. For Republicans, 73% described illegal immigrant voting as common, while just 20% said it would not be common. Independents divide 48% common and 39% not common.
I&I/TIPP asked a follow-on question: “How likely is it that illegal immigrant voting will affect the presidential election outcome?”
Again, a majority — 51% — answered it was either “very likely” (25%) or “somewhat likely” (26%), while 38% responded “not very likely” (15%) or “not at all likely” (23%). Another 12% said they were “not sure.”
Perhaps predictably, the responses by party affiliation broke down pretty much as with the first question: For Democrats, 36% thought illegal immigrant participation would affect the outcome, while 50% thought it wouldn’t.
Among Republicans, 71% thought there would be an impact, versus 20% believing there wouldn’t be one. And a plurality of 47% of independents believed there would be a likely influence, while 40% said it was not likely.
One major minority group in America saw things quite differently than white and black Americans: Hispanics. But contrary to what some might think, they were far more likely than the others to say that illegal immigrant voting would be common and affect the outcome.
Regarding the question of how common such voting would be, white and black voters’ responses weren’t very different at all, with 48% of black voters saying illegal immigrant participation in the election would be likely, compared to a near-identical 49% of white voters who agreed. But a sizable 58% of Hispanics said illegal participation likely would be common.
The same was mostly true for the second question regarding illegal voters’ impacts on the actual outcome of the 2024 election. But this time blacks (56%) and Hispanics (61%) pretty much saw eye-to-eye that there would be a likely impact, versus just 49% of whites.
Are average Americans right? Or is it, as some on the left suggest, just xenophobic paranoia?
It is important to note that, while Republicans are at the top of the range in their concerns over illegal immigrant participation in the election, a significant minority and, in some cases, a plurality, of voters in the Democratic Party, third parties and independents worry about the same thing.
Under the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, it is already against the law for those in the U.S. illegally to vote in federal elections.
The problem is, there is little if any routine enforcement of the law, so election officials have no real good handle on just how many illegal immigrants vote.
“If a nefarious actor wants to intervene in our elections, all they have to do is check a box on a form and sign their name,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said at a May 8 press conference pushing his Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act (SAVE). “That’s it. That’s all that’s required. And there’s a very small chance that illegal would get caught.”
He added, “the millions that have been paroled (by President Biden) can simply go to their local welfare office or the DMV and register to vote.” Voter registration forms don’t ask for proof of citizenship; they simply ask those filling out the form to “attest” that they are citizens.
As the I&I/TIPP Poll suggests, this is now a bipartisan issue. A Pew Research survey from earlier in the year shows that 81% favor requiring a government-issued ID in order to vote, a key element of the SAVE act that passed Congress, but that President Biden has vowed to veto.
How serious is the problem of illegal immigrant voting? The truth is, no one really knows, since the government does little or nothing to prevent or even monitor it.
Government data show roughly 11 million illegal immigrants in the U.S., but that was before the last three years of record illegal immigration flow across U.S. borders.
However, according to official data, border agents have “encountered” more than 10 million people that have crossed illegally into the U.S. during Biden’s time in office, including roughly 1.7 million “gotaways” who crossed without getting caught.
“In fiscal year 2023, Border Patrol agents arrested more than 35,000 illegal aliens with criminal convictions, including nearly 600 known gang members,” according to The Federalist. “That number greatly surpasses the just over 4,200 illegal aliens with criminal histories detained in fiscal year 2019.”
Also, since 2021, almost 300 people on the U.S. Terrorist Watchlist have been apprehended at the border.
Why has this happened?
After entering office, Biden signed more than 60 executive orders, 24 of them “direct reversals” of Trump policies, with a special focus on immigration. As CNN noted early in Biden’s first year as president, “To date (April 30, 2021), 10 of his 12 actions on immigration are reversals of Trump’s policies.”
Americans are now alarmed over this sudden influx of illegal entrants, which has overwhelmed cities and states across the nation.
A major concern: “Welfare offices and other agencies in at least 46 US states are providing voter registration forms to migrants without requiring proof of citizenship,” The New York Post reported last week.
In short, the possibility of massive voter fraud among undocumented immigrants is very real. Indeed it’s so real, as the I&I/TIPP Poll shows, that Americans worry about its impact on the 2024 presidential election.
I&I/TIPP publishes timely, unique, and informative data each month on topics of public interest. TIPP’s reputation for polling excellence comes from being the most accurate pollster for the past five presidential elections.
Terry Jones is an editor of Issues & Insights. His four decades of journalism experience include serving as national issues editor, economics editor, and editorial page editor for Investor’s Business Daily.
Corrections
Our Sunday editorial, “Lessons From Attempt On Trump’s Life,” misstated that the shooter fired multiple shots from 400 yards away. The correct distance is 400 feet. Additionally, it incorrectly stated that Congressman Ronny Jackson’s (R-TX) nephew was killed. He was shot but survived.
– Editor
TIPP Takes
Geopolitics, Geoeconomics, And More
1. IDF Says Senior Hamas Commander Killed In Israeli Air Strike – BBC
The Israeli army said senior Hamas commander Rafa Salama, a commander of the Khan Younis Brigade, was one of the “masterminds” of the 7 October attack and a close associate of Mohammed Deif, the top commander of Hamas’s military wing.
It is not known whether Deif was killed. The Israeli army said he was also targeted in the strike.
Hamas has not confirmed the report. The Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza had said that Israel’s strike hit a camp for displaced people in a designated humanitarian zone in Khan Younis, killing at least 90 Palestinians and injuring 289 others.
2. Yemen’s Houthis Conduct Military Operations In Gulf Of Aden, Israel’s Eilat – Reuters
Yemen’s Houthis said they had conducted two military operations, one in the Gulf of Aden and one in Eilat at the southern tip of Israel.
Houthi military spokesperson Yahya Saree said the group had targeted the Israeli ship MSC UNIFIC in the Gulf of Aden with ballistic missiles and drones in addition to attacking military targets in Eilat with drones.
The spokesperson said that the latest military operations came in response to the Israeli airstrike on Khan Younis on Saturday.
3. Russia To Ban Adoption From Countries Recognizing Gender Transition – RFE/RL
The legislation being developed would ban child adoption by citizens of countries that either allow people to change their gender through medical procedures or on official documents.
In a note to the legislation, the speaker of the lower house of parliament, or State Duma, Vyacheslav Volodin, wrote that Russia was “essentially implementing a ban on the adoption of children by citizens of NATO countries.” The move appears to expand the 2012 legislation known as the Dima Yakovlev law, which bars U.S. citizens from adopting Russian children.
4. China, Russia Start Naval Drills, Days After NATO Says Beijing Enables Ukraine War – A.P.
The official news agency Xinhua reported that Chinese and Russian naval forces kicked off a joint exercise at a military port in southern China.
China’s Defense Ministry said in a brief statement that forces from both sides recently patrolled the western and northern Pacific Ocean. The operation had nothing to do with international and regional situations and didn’t target any third party.
5. China’s GDP Grows 4.7% In 2nd Quarter, But Pace Of Expansion Falls – Kyodo News
The expansion in inflation-adjusted GDP of the world’s second-largest economy decelerated from 5.3 percent in the previous three months of last year, a period boosted by stimulus measures.
The expansion slowed amid a continued property sector crisis, trade disputes with the West, and weak demand. Beijing has set a growth target of around 5 percent for 2024.
6. China’s Communist Party Set To Open Key Policy Meeting Amid Economy Worries – RFA
Top members of the ruling Communist Party of China will gather Monday to discuss ways to lift the world’s second-biggest economy out of its post-COVID slump and reduce dependence on technology from its geopolitical rival, the United States.
Policy advisers have said that the four-day, closed-door meeting, chaired by President Xi Jinping, is expected to unveil tax system revisions and other debt-reduction measures, steps to deal with a massive property crisis, and policies to boost domestic consumption.
7. Thailand’s Manufacturing Sector Faces Crisis As Chinese Imports Soar – Reuters
When Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD opened its first Southeast Asian factory in Thailand earlier this month, the nation’s people basked in the limelight and won praise for its industrial vision.
What, however, received less attention was Suzuki Motor’s announcement just a few weeks earlier that it would shutter a Thai factory that produced as many as 60,000 cars a year.
Suzuki’s move mirrors scores of other companies in Southeast Asia’s second-biggest economy, which is bearing the brunt of cheap imports from China and a slide in industrial competitiveness due to rising energy prices and an aging workforce.
8. Turkey To Soon Wind Down Latest Operation In Northern Iraq, Erdogan Says – Al Jazeera
Turkey will soon end its latest ground military operation in northern Iraq, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said. The Turkish leader did not give a timeline for the end of the operation.
Speaking to military academy graduates, Erdogan hailed Operation Claw-Lock, which Ankara launched in April 2022, as a success, saying Kurdish fighters were now “incapable of acting inside our borders.” Turkish forces have been sporadically fighting the northern-Iraq-based Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) for decades.
9. Kuwait Announces ‘Giant’ Oil Discovery – Reuters
Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (KPC) said it had made a “giant” oil discovery in the al-Nokhatha field, with the oil reserves estimated at 3.2 billion barrels.
KPC’s CEO, Sheikh Nawaf Saud Nasir al-Sabah, said in a video posted by the company on X that the discovery’s reserves were equivalent to the country’s entire production in three years.
10. North Korea Hints At Response To South Korean Leaflet Campaign- UPI
“I was informed today that, again, filthy leaflets and articles of South Korean trash were found near the border and in some remote areas of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea,” Kim Yo-jong, the sister of North Korean Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un, said in a statement carried by state media.
“As I have already warned, those scumbags who do this will face even more harsh criticism from their people. We have fully explained our response policy in these situations,” she said.
11. South Korea Warns Of End Of North Korean Regime If Pyongyang Uses Nuclear Weapons – Yonhap
“We sternly warn that there is no scenario in which North Korea’s regime will survive after using nuclear weapons,” Seoul’s defense ministry said in a statement.
It was released in response to a statement by the North Korean defense ministry from the previous day. After South Korea and the United States adopted “Guidelines for Nuclear Deterrence and Nuclear Operations on the Korean Peninsula” in Washington, North Korea condemned it as a “reckless provocative act.”
12. Global Conflict Surge Hindered Childhood Vaccinations In 2023: UN Report – Reuters
More children were left out of critical vaccination drives for diseases such as diphtheria, tetanus, and whooping cough last year as a rise in conflicts across the globe hindered the supply of life-saving shots, mostly in strife-torn regions, the United Nations said.
According to UN estimates, about 14.5 million children failed to get vaccinated in 2023, compared with 13.9 million a year earlier. However, the number was lower than during the COVID-19 pandemic, when about 18 million children missed vaccination.
13. New Magnetic Therapy Might Help Treat Bipolar Disorder – HealthDay News
Powerful magnetic stimulation can help treat people with bipolar disorder, according to results from a small trial.
The therapy called accelerated intermittent theta burst stimulation, involves magnetic waves delivered to specific brain regions using an electromagnetic coil placed against the scalp. Researchers noted that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has already approved this form of transcranial magnetic stimulation to treat major depressive disorder.
Republished with permission from TIPP Insights
Criminal aliens probably won’t determine the 2024 election, BUT after the 2030 census they will, if they’re still here.