History tells us to be wary of these numbers. https://t.co/HUnG3BMUUE
— USA TODAY (@USATODAY) January 31, 2019
This is starting to look like a screwup as big as Texas: “They sent out a list and called us and said it was a mistake,” Van Wolfe said. “All those people have proven citizenship.” https://t.co/DlqtyS951K via @wacotrib
— Karen Tumulty (@ktumulty) January 31, 2019
1/ On Friday, Texas loudly announced that counties should check on the citizenship of 95,000 registered voters.
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) January 31, 2019
McLennan County got a list of 366 registered voters to check.
Turns out everyone on that list is a citizen. #txlege https://t.co/3H8eMICMHI via @wacotrib
On Friday, Texas announced that counties should check on the citizenship of 95,000 registered voters.
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) January 31, 2019
And then Texas quietly told counties that many don't belong on that list.
One county's list had zero non-citizens. New @TwitterMoments. #txlege https://t.co/ZO2vUEh5Wy
Claims of voter fraud keep surfacing and keep getting debunked. “Citizenship status changes, and the fact is when that when you do this kind of large-scale database matching you’re going to confuse people,” says the Brennan Center's @myrna_perez_. https://t.co/TMBPOVoBb1
— Brennan Center (@BrennanCenter) February 1, 2019