A conservative election integrity group, Cause of America, has announced findings from an extensive review of voter records, asserting that "hundreds of thousands" of individuals who should not be on the rolls have been identified. The organization, co-founded by prominent attorney Harmeet K. Dhillon, stated that its analysis of "50-60 MILLION voter records" uncovered issues including deceased voters, individuals who have moved, duplicates, and even non-citizens.
"We’ve run 50–60 MILLION voter records and found HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS who should not be on the rolls—dead voters, movers, duplicates, even non-citizens. This is not ‘a conspiracy theory.’ It’s data," Harmeet K. Dhillon stated in a recent social media post. Dhillon, a national leader in election integrity efforts, has consistently criticized mass mail-in voting and lax voter roll maintenance.
Cause of America, a 501(c)(4) non-profit, emphasized that these discrepancies highlight a system "built for abuse," citing "corrupt voter rolls + mass mail ballots + no real ID checks." The organization's website details reports, such as a 2024 nationwide analysis that found "hundreds of thousands of anomalies" across several swing states, supporting their claims.
The group advocates for proactive measures, stating, "We don’t fix this with press releases. We fix it with citizen-led canvassing, list cleanup, and lawfare in every corrupt county in America." Dhillon Law Group, founded by Harmeet K. Dhillon, actively engages in election law litigation, filing lawsuits to compel election officials to remove ineligible voters and challenging alleged irregularities.
Maintaining accurate voter rolls is a critical and ongoing task for election administrators nationwide. The U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) and other experts acknowledge that voter rolls commonly contain inaccuracies due to factors like population mobility, data entry errors, and resource constraints. While the presence of inaccurate records is a known administrative challenge, instances of actual voter fraud are statistically rare, according to reports from organizations like the Brennan Center.
Election officials utilize various methods, including cross-referencing death records, change-of-address data, and interstate voter registration programs, to keep rolls current. However, the debate over voter roll maintenance often balances election integrity concerns with the prevention of disenfranchisement for eligible voters, underscoring the complexities of the electoral system.