Clinton Judge Rules Illegal Aliens Are Now Allowed To Vote in Federal Elections

A Clinton-appointed federal judge has ruled that illegal aliens are allowed to vote in federal elections by blocking President Trump’s rule requiring proof of U.S. citizenship for federal voter registration.

Clinton Judge Rules Illegal Aliens Are Now Allowed To Vote in Federal Elections

The controversial ruling, issued by Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, strikes down one of the Trump administration’s most basic election integrity measures.

Patriot.tv reports: Judge Kollar-Kotelly, a veteran of the Washington establishment who has presided over numerous politically charged cases, declared that the President lacked the authority to direct the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) to update federal registration forms to require documentation like a birth certificate, passport, or naturalization papers. Her decision effectively removes any verification process at the federal level for proving that a person registering to vote is actually a U.S. citizen.

The case centered on the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA), often referred to as the “Motor Voter” law, which established a standardized federal form for voter registration. The Trump administration’s executive order sought to close the loophole that allows applicants to simply check a box claiming citizenship—without providing any proof. In her ruling, however, Kollar-Kotelly sided with left-wing groups who argued that the requirement would burden potential voters.

The effect of the ruling is simple but devastating: anyone, including non-citizens, can now use the federal voter registration form without ever proving they belong in the electorate of the United States. In other words, the government is trusting the “honor system” in an age of illegal immigration, mail-in ballots, and massive voter databases riddled with errors.

Election integrity advocates say this is precisely how trust in American democracy continues to erode. “Citizenship verification isn’t voter suppression—it’s common sense,” one constitutional attorney said after the decision. “You can’t board a plane without ID. You can’t buy alcohol without ID. Yet Democrats want you to vote without proving you’re even a citizen.”

The left has long fought voter ID and citizenship verification laws, painting them as discriminatory even though they apply equally to every citizen. But their real motivation is clear: by weakening verification requirements, they expand the voter pool to include those who should have no say in America’s future. With millions of illegal aliens now in the country—many granted driver’s licenses or access to state benefits—the potential for foreign participation in federal elections is not just theoretical.

Kollar-Kotelly’s ruling follows a pattern that has defined the last two decades: left-leaning judges and activist organizations using the courts to block almost every attempt to secure the ballot box. From striking down voter ID laws to stopping audits and purges of outdated voter rolls, these rulings always seem to favor one side—the side that benefits from chaos, confusion, and a lack of accountability.

The irony is painful. The same political class that lectures America about “foreign interference” in elections now fights tooth and nail to make it easier for non-citizens to vote. And they’re winning those fights in courtrooms run by Clinton- and Obama-era appointees who see the rule of law as an obstacle to their ideology.

President Trump’s team is expected to appeal the decision, possibly setting up another Supreme Court battle over whether citizenship itself can be verified in the act of voting. For now, however, the ruling means that the federal voter registration system—the gateway to participating in national elections—operates on the weakest possible standard: self-attestation.

The Founders understood that citizenship was sacred. The right to vote was never meant to be a global right; it was an American one. But in the name of “accessibility,” modern Democrats have blurred that line almost beyond recognition. If citizenship no longer defines the American voter, then the very idea of national sovereignty becomes a political fiction.

Judge Kollar-Kotelly’s ruling doesn’t just strike down an executive order—it strikes at the heart of what it means to be a self-governing people. And unless Congress or the Supreme Court steps in soon, the 2026 elections may be the most unverified—and least trustworthy—in modern American history.

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