Letting Illegals Vote Is Destructive

Thomas D. EliasOP-EDLeave a Comment

Thomas D. Elias
Mr. Elias

Almost no one seemed to notice during last fall’s election that yet another line between citizens and immigrant non-citizens was breached. Even before then, there were few privileges and rights that immigrants – both documented and undocumented – could not enjoy in some parts of California.

  • Driver’s licences, check.
  • Illegal immigrant children eligible for state-paid medical insurance under Medi-Cal, check.
  • In-state college tuition, check that, too.
  • Undocumented immigrants even have the right to practice law under a bill signed in 2015 by Gov. Brown.
  • Legal immigrants can be poll workers at election time, too, because of a perceived shortage of multi-lingual election officials.
  • About the only thing non-citizens can’t do is vote. Wait a minute. San Francisco voters by a 54-46 percent margin last fall decided to blur that, too, for immigrant parents of public school pupils regardless of their legal status. They passed Prop. N to give non-citizen parents of public school children the right to vote in school board elections.
  • So non-citizens, even if undocumented, now can help decide who will spend taxpayer money, and indirectly, how it will be spent.

One fly is in this ointment, at least for the undocumented. One that local officials have not yet figured a way around.

Most school board elections in San Francisco and elsewhere coincide with votes on myriad other offices and issues. But noncitizens there are authorized to vote only on school board candidates.

Does this mean noncitizen parents exercising their new local right will be handed special ballots at the polls or, under California’s soon-to-be-implemented new election system, receive special ballots in the mail?

Will they fill out different forms when they register from the ones used by citizens?

This has not yet been decided.

If noncitizens do receive special forms and ballots, it will be because they are honest enough to admit their actual immigration status. If they do admit it and get separate, unequal treatment via ballots dealing with only one type of contest, they might just be risking deportation.

Here Comes Trump

That is because President Trump has said for more than a year that he intends to deport all illegal immigrants, regardless of how law-abiding they are in other ways. He has said he wants to start with undocumented immigrants who are also criminals, but that has not changed his ultimate goal of ousting virtually all illegals. San Francisco’s voting records might provide a method for his operatives to locate some of them.

This leaves local officials a tad perplexed.

Said former San Francisco Supervisor Eric Mar, who sponsored Prop. N:

“We have to craft a really strong privacy policy so if anyone wants to vote, we…ensure their contact information…isn’t revealed or given over to the federal government or any entity like (immigration) enforcement.”

That won’t be easy, considering that Mr. Trump’s Justice Dept. can subpoena any voting records it likes, just as federal lawyers have done for years while fighting voting rights cases in the old South.

San Francisco’s school system spent years trying to convince parents that their records will be safe. That is one reason the local school databases don’t list citizenship status.

There are other complications, including the question of whether some parents could vote twice in school board elections if the schools sent out special schools-only ballots to parents, while citizen parents would also see the same contests on their regular ballots.

San Francisco has a lot to work through, with no easy solutions in sight. The city  already has taken the issue of non-citizen voting a step beyond where it is anywhere else.

Yes, in New York City, left-leaning Mayor Bill de Blasio and his sympatico City Council several times have  considered a law allowing all legal residents, regardless of citizenship status, to vote in local elections.

Their rationale is that citizens and non-citizens are equally affected by public policy from tax levies to road building and policing. They say this ought to entitle all residents to an equal voice in local matters. It has not yet happened there.

Giving non-citizens the ultimate right belonging to citizens, along with all the other privileges they already have attained, would remove most of the motive to do the very basic book-learning needed to become a citizen.

Which makes this ultimately a destructive practice.

Mr. Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *