Mullin: Team reviewing non-citizens on voter rolls 'one by one'
Trump, for his part, urged Congress to pass a major voter ID bill to contend with the issue.
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Markwayne Mullin on Friday confirmed that the agency was individually reviewing the cases of each non-citizen they had discovered on the voter rolls.
President Donald Trump announced Thursday evening that the administration had found 278,000 non-citizens on voter rolls in cooperative states and warned of the threat to election integrity. Mullin, in a press conference, said that the agency was reviewing each instance.
"We are now going to that record," he said. "We're setting up a department in DHS ... We are going through these files one by one."
The matter of non-citizens on the voter rolls has long been a concern for Republicans, many of whom have warned that mass immigration and lax registration rules would lead to foreigners voting illegally.
Trump, for his part, urged Congress to pass a major voter ID bill to contend with the issue.
Ben Whedon is the Chief Political Correspondent for Just the News. Follow him on X.