Here’s something that should alarm every American who believes elections matter. Noncitizens in New Jersey were sitting on voter rolls for years, and some of them actually cast ballots in previous elections. Not speculation. Not conspiracy theory. Documented fact, courtesy of public records requests filed by the New Jersey Republican Party and the Republican National Committee.

The pattern is almost too predictable. These noncitizens, now seeking naturalization and worried their voter registration might torpedo their citizenship applications, are scrambling to get themselves removed from the rolls. They’re claiming they never knew they were registered. And here’s the kicker: most of them were registered as Democrats.

You know what strikes me about this whole mess? It’s not just the failure itself. It’s the casual indifference that allowed it to happen. We’re talking about 21 counties in a blue state where the basic infrastructure of democracy, the voter rolls that determine who gets to participate in choosing our leaders, was compromised for years. And nobody seemed to notice or care until Republicans started asking questions.

The noncitizens themselves are panicking now, and rightfully so. Federal law is crystal clear on this point. If you’re not a citizen, you don’t vote in state or federal elections. Period. These individuals understand that being on voter rolls, even accidentally, could derail their entire path to citizenship. So they’re coming forward, requesting removal, and inadvertently exposing a system that’s been broken for who knows how long.

Think about the implications here. How many elections were affected? How many close races might have swung differently if only eligible voters had participated? We don’t know, and that uncertainty is precisely the problem. Election integrity isn’t some abstract principle that only matters to political nerds. It’s the foundation of representative government. When that foundation cracks, everything built on top of it becomes suspect.

The RNC chair is pledging secure elections moving forward, which is fine and necessary. But promises don’t fix what’s already happened. They don’t restore confidence in results that might have been tainted. They don’t answer the questions that every New Jersey voter should be asking right now about whether their voice was diluted by people who had no legal right to participate.

Democrats love to dismiss concerns about election security as voter suppression dressed up in patriotic language. They’ll probably claim this New Jersey situation is just administrative error, nothing to see here, move along. But administrative errors that consistently benefit one party start looking less like accidents and more like features of a system that someone designed to work exactly this way.

The fact that most of these noncitizens were registered as Democrats isn’t irrelevant background noise. It’s a data point that demands explanation. How did they get registered? Who registered them? What safeguards failed? And most importantly, why did it take the RNC and state Republicans digging through records to expose what should have been caught by election officials years ago?

This isn’t about demonizing immigrants or making citizenship harder. It’s about maintaining the basic rules that make self-governance possible. Citizens vote. Noncitizens don’t. That’s not controversial unless you’ve got a stake in keeping the system murky and exploitable.

New Jersey isn’t unique. It’s just the state where someone finally bothered to look closely. That should terrify anyone who cares about election integrity, regardless of party affiliation. Because if it’s happening in the Garden State, it’s probably happening elsewhere too.

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