One at a time. The way you do anything.
My wife at the time was not a citizen when she received a Florida drivers license. The DMV clerk asked her if she would like to register to vote. I chimed in and reminded the clerk that my wife was not a U.S. citizen. The clerk glared at me, looked to my wife and asked her again if she would like to register to vote. My wife declined.
Did you report this clerk?
Or did you do nothing?
Problem is, anyone with a drivers license, state ID, or a social security card, all of which non-citizens can get in many places, can register to vote.
Not exactly.
I was never asked to provide a birth certificate or naturalization paperwork when I registered to vote. Were you?
I was asked for both my BC and a valid passport.
There is no mechanism in place to flag those who are ineligible from being able to vote.
Yes, there is.
That it is not used is another story but the mechanism is there.
I was never asked for my BC or anything like that when I registered to vote many years ago. That was in Wisconsin.
I moved to California, and then to Nevada. Was never asked there, either.
As for the questions at the DMV-—The motor voter law REQUIRES the DMV employee to start that conversation. They will lose their job if they don’t. Even if they know for certain they are dealing with a non-citizen.
Another reason to NOT give out Driver’s licenses to illegals.