On election day voters become public officials empowered to make the call on who becomes president, governor and members of Congress. California voters can also approve or reject ballot measures on tax policy, such as the landmark Proposition 13, the People’s Initiative to Limit Property Taxation. In the style of John Lennon, imagine an unelected imposter posing as a legislator and casting a vote to approve a tax increase. That is what happens when persons illegally present in the United States vote in American elections. Some states empower voter fraud on a massive scale.
California, for example, automatically registers illegals to vote when they get their driver’s license at the DMV. State officials won’t say how many million false-documented illegals violated the law by voting in 2016, 2018, 2020, or the 2021 recall election for Gavin Newsom. California’s governor recently enabled more voter fraud by signing Senate Bill 1174, which prohibits local governments from enacting or enforcing identification requirements for voting. The measure was authored by state Sen. David Min, Irvine Democrat, now running for Congress in California’s 47th district.
Min earned a JD at Harvard, served as an enforcement attorney with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and taught law at the UC Irvine School of Law for eight years. The Orange County Democrat is a member of the bar in New York State and the District of Columbia and in February, 2022, he passed the California bar exam. That exam has stringent requirements, including a moral character test. Those taking the test must include fingerprints – an irrefutable ID check – from a Live Scan Service form completed within the last 90 days.
Contributors to Min’s congressional campaign must certify, “I am a U.S. citizen or lawfully admitted permanent resident (i.e., green card holder).” As the Harvard law alum must know, by law U.S. citizenship is a requirement for voting, yet the senator and candidate wants to bar identification of voters.
Californians are required to produce identification to board airplanes, apply for a home loan, purchase a firearm, purchase whiskey, become an attorney, and so forth. Californians might think a Harvard law alum and law professor would know that. Anybody who endorses non-citizen voting forfeits any claim to support the rule of law, and Min ran into trouble with the law against drunk driving.
On an August night in 2023 in Sacramento, the state senator ran two red lights with his headlights off. Min tested .15 for blood-alcohol level, equivalent to nine drinks. The drunk driver was fined $2,000 and sentenced to three years probation. So the Orange County Democrat is still on probation, a reality neglected by the media with the notable exception of the California Globe.
Min’s DUI bust is a factor in his race against Republican Scott Baugh, endorsed by Donald Trump.
In 2020, Sen. Kamala Harris endorsed Min for the California Senate but the Democrats’ replacement for Joe Biden has kept quiet about Min’s run for Congress. On the other hand, Min has endorsed Harris for president, and he sounds a lot like her.
“What I’d like to see happen is for us to restore the status quo we had under Roe v. Wade,” Min told reporters last month. “I think the codification of Roe v. Wade is something I would support should I be elected to Congress.” The Democrat still on probation wasn’t done. “The biggest difference is that a Democratic House might actually get something done. This particular Republican House is going to be infamous for being the worst Congress in history.”
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