From the LA times:
"What about people in the country illegally who are able to obtain driver's licenses in California under a law passed in 2013?
Padilla noted that there is already a separate process for residents in the country illegally to apply for special licenses. Although citizens are currently offered the opportunity to register to vote at the DMV under an earlier federal law, noncitizens are not. That will continue under the new registration process. People applying for the special licenses will not be asked about their eligibility to vote and will not be asked if they’d like to opt out of registration.
“We’ve built the protocols and the firewalls to not register people that aren’t eligible,” Padilla said. “We’re going to keep those firewalls in place.""
This was addressed at
Snopes as well.
I appreciate the links, but it doesn't address my "core" question very well, so I will re-focus and re-state.
From a number of threads/posts on here, there has been talk about requirements to vote, and how needing ID to do so is seen as anathema and/or a poll tax to many, and discriminating against the homeless or others who
can't get an ID card and/or drivers license. I disagree with that perspective, but that seems to be the law of the land down there. OK, fine. But in that context, and given that many of these illegal immigrants DO have ID, and (presumably) that ID has their address on it, what stops them going into a polling station, and say they're not registered, but WANT to be, lying, and then voting? If somebody with NO identification can do so, isn't there basically no barrier, and perhaps even less of a one for somebody
with ID?
So I'm not talking about pre-registration like your links address (and they seem to, requiring a birth certificate or passport is mentioned in the snopes link), but poll-time "I'm coming up here and I want to vote" activity. What stops it in California, or any other state, considering the lack of identification requirement in the first place? Hence my final few sentences above of "what's the requirement in California to vote? Show residency in the area? If one of these people had a "valid" California Driver's License, what would stop them from voting? I'm genuinely curious what controls exist." And it doesn't have to be California. Anywhere is fine IMO.