October 9, 2024 |
Photo – US Flag – Bigfoot99 file photo
Wyoming’s Congressional Delegation signed onto a letter blasting U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland for not responding to a letter dated July 12, 2024. Congress was seeking details about how the United States Department of Justice will enforce laws prohibiting voting in the presidential election by non-citizens—a polite euphemism for illegal aliens.
The letter reads, “Your Department’s inaction and refusal to provide any information regarding its efforts to promote public trust and confidence in our elections is especially alarming.”
The U.S. General Election is less than four weeks from today, on Tuesday, November 5.
In their letter this week, Congressional members document new voting violations. Among the examples documented in the letter dated October 2, the Virginia Attorney General announced that 6,303 non-citizens were identified on and removed from Virginia’s voter rolls in 2022 and 2023. In Texas, over 6,500 non-citizens registered to vote and were identified and removed from voter rolls. Of the 6,500 non-citizens identified, 1,930 had a voter history of turning out for other elections illegally.
“Clearly,” the senators note in their letter to the Attorney General, “there is a non-negligible amount of voter participation by non-citizens in federal elections, which is not only a serious threat to the integrity of our elections and the democratic process they represent, but also has the potential to reduce Americans’ trust and confidence in election results.”
The letter was led by Senator Bill Hagerty of Tennessee and Representative Andy Biggs of Arizona. Joining Hagerty and Biggs were 32 senators 39 House members.
Not a single Democrat from either house signed the letter of concern about the nation’s most sacred institution—the sanctity of the vote.