How a post falsely claiming migrants are registering to vote spread to millions in four weeks

how a post falsely claiming migrants are registering to vote spread to millions in four weeks

How a post falsely claiming migrants are registering to vote spread to millions in four weeks

ALLENTOWN, Pa. — The rumor started as a post on X.

The post published in early April misrepresented federal data from the Social Security Administration to falsely suggest that hundreds of thousands of migrants may have registered to vote in Pennsylvania, Arizona and Texas. One hour later, the tweet got the rocket fuel it needed to take off: X owner Elon Musk reposted it with the comment, “extremely concerning.”

In less than four days, the false narrative was widely shared on X, Facebook and Instagram. Donald Trump and Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene soon joined in, respectively proclaiming, “What is going on???” and “Are migrants registering to vote using SSN?” By the end of the month, the original tweet and Musk’s had generated more than 125 million views.

All the while, election officials in the three states publicly debunked the claims, and multiple news organizations and a news literacy nonprofit published fact-checking articles providing accurate context. Yet the rumors continued spreading — showing how virulent misinformation is and how casually it can spread on social media.

Under federal laws, only U.S. citizens can vote in federal elections, and states are required to regularly update their voter rolls, or voter registration lists, to remove anyone ineligible.

The X post that triggered this latest wave of migrant voting misinformation used publicly available federal data from the Help America Vote Verification (HAVV) program, which shows the total number of times Texas, Pennsylvania and Arizona requested the Social Security Administration to verify a voter’s identity using their Social Security numbers.

While verification requests are not necessarily a one-to-one tally of people registering to vote, the X post falsely presented such numbers as if they were, suggesting that nearly 1.9 million individual voters registered in such states without a photo identification, only using the last four digits of their Social Security numbers.

The post then states that people present in the U.S. illegally can get Social Security cards with a work authorization. That is not widely the case. In 2021, about 587,000 noncitizens, most of whom were  lawful permanent residents or were granted work permits, received a Social Security number. Noncitizens with Social Security numbers are still banned from voting. A study of the 2016 election conducted by the Brennan Center the following year found “that of 23.5 million votes cast, election officials only found about 30 cases of potential noncitizen voting,” according to The Associated Press.

Mert Bayar, a postdoctoral scholar at the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public, has researched the connections between false claims of noncitizen voting and “rigged election” allegations for the past several years.

Bayar has found that falsehoods connected to these narratives often gain more traction when “there’s a real crisis behind it,” such as the increasing number of migrants seeking to cross the U.S.-Mexico border. They also often include “misleading cuts of evidence to put [in] some sort of a grain of truth,” he said.

X did not respond to a request for comment.

Once the falsehoods hit social media, moderators face a difficult game of Whac-A-Mole to keep up with the spread, even after a claim has been fact-checked.

Media Matters, a left-leaning nonprofit media watchdog, provided NBC News with 10 examples of social media posts published on Meta’s platforms, most of them from Facebook, that amplified the false claim from X. Nearly two weeks after the claims in the posts had been publicly debunked, the social media company had only labeled one of the 10 posts as containing false information and included a hyperlink to a fact-checking article.

NBC News sent links for the 10 posts to a Meta representative. Hours later, Meta labeled all the posts as false.

According to a Meta spokesperson, when one of its fact-checking partners determines a post contains false information, it kicks off an automated “similarity detection” process to identify other posts duplicating the same debunked content and label them as false. But when misinformation is shared through screenshots, as it was in the Facebook posts, it can often remain undetected by the automated methods and would require a content moderator or a fact-checker to manually find and flag the posts.

The false information label not only signals to Meta users that they may be receiving misinformation, but it also helps the company reduce the distribution of that content on their platforms, the spokesperson added.

Kadida Kenner, CEO of the New Pennsylvania Project, a voting rights organization that has helped register 40,000 new voters in the state over the past three years, said her team often encounters people who believe misinformation “as it relates to the safety of our elections,” she said.

Kenner said she believes “there’s bad actors that are absolutely putting bad information” on social media to cast doubt over the electoral process “with the intent to suppress votes.”

And while her organization hadn’t come across the falsehood about migrants being able to vote, the conflicting stories and prevalence of questionable information about voting in the election has contributed to potential voters feeling disengaged, Kenner said, adding that countering such feeling is “a big part of our job at this moment.”

Bobby Arena, the outreach director for the Lehigh County GOP in Pennsylvania, got a text message from someone who came across the false social media claims suggesting hundreds of thousands of migrants may have registered to vote illegally.

Arena said he later fact-checked the information and realized the numbers were off — they were “just too extreme” — and responded to the person who had initially texted him about it.

But that still didn’t appease Arena’s underlying concerns over “a potential problem with the voter rolls.”

Republicans in Pennsylvania and in other states have been scrutinizing voter registration lists through lawsuits and legislation as the party increasingly seizes on the rolls as a focus of their election activism, even when there’s no evidence that bloated voter rolls lead to voter fraud.

Bayar said that while correction is the best response available to combat misinformation, it still falls short on addressing the sets of beliefs tied to such false narratives.

“You are dealing with people’s anti-immigration attitudes, people’s partisanship, people’s ideology, people’s grievances toward the system,” Bayar said. “So, what you’re trying to correct is not just one belief, but a mindset that is distrustful of the U.S. elections.”

For more from NBC Latino, sign up for our weekly newsletter.

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

OTHER NEWS

9 minutes ago

Nickelodeon star Victoria Justice breaks silence on Dan Schneider: 'I was treated unfairly!'

10 minutes ago

Reports: Former five-star defensive back Cormani McClain transferring to Florida from Colorado

10 minutes ago

Kirk Herbstreit, Chris Fowler ready to 'blow people's minds' with EA Sports College Football 25

10 minutes ago

King of walks: 25-year-old Juan Soto breaks Mickey Mantle record

10 minutes ago

Morocco’s automotive industry shifts gears to prep for electric vehicle era

10 minutes ago

Purple Patch restaurant an homage to beloved Filipino culture in heart of DC

11 minutes ago

What The X-Men '97 Season 1 Post-Credits Tease & Why Marvel Fans Are Freaking Out

11 minutes ago

New study reveals Texas tops the nation in hunger crisis

12 minutes ago

PHOTOS: A sneak peek inside Wilmette's massive Wayfair store opening next week

13 minutes ago

What’s in a name? Montreal’s international airport takes rival to court over rebrand

13 minutes ago

‘Happy Gilmore’ Sequel Greenlighted At Netflix

13 minutes ago

Sharon Osbourne Says She Regrets Apologizing To Sheryl Underwood After ‘The Talk’ Feud: “F*** You! She Knew What I Was”

13 minutes ago

‘Bridgerton’ Season 2 Recap: What to Remember for Season 3

14 minutes ago

Bipartisan group of senators unveil plan to tackle artificial intelligence

15 minutes ago

Benefits cheat secretly filmed running when she claimed she could barely walk jailed for TWO years

16 minutes ago

Lucas Glover lashes out against PGA Tour player directors: 'We have no business having the majority'

16 minutes ago

Danaher's rally shows how sticking with a troubled stock of a good company can pay off

16 minutes ago

Arron Oberholser fired up over Jon Rahm’s PGA Tour comments: ‘I want to wring his neck’

16 minutes ago

Israel shows footage of armed men at UN location in Gaza

16 minutes ago

'It has been an honour of a lifetime': Toronto's top doctor announces her resignation

16 minutes ago

Power outage leads to suspension of Luas Green line service

16 minutes ago

The last places in Britain to see red squirrels

16 minutes ago

'It's extremely disturbing' Patients reselling weight loss drugs on black market in Ireland

16 minutes ago

The Nissan Frontier Hardbody Edition Is Just Cool

16 minutes ago

The NFL's reported 2024 Chiefs schedule certainly feels a bit exploitative

16 minutes ago

Social Democrats leader doesn’t think deselection of Israeli candidate will hurt party in elections

16 minutes ago

Bridgerton season 3: Netflix releases a look at first five minutes of new episode ahead of full series launch

16 minutes ago

Our editors’ favorite keyboards of 2024

17 minutes ago

Second injunction request to remove pro-Palestinian encampment at McGill rejected

17 minutes ago

Georgia erupts in fury as 'Russian law' passes

17 minutes ago

Steelers Projected to Finish Last in AFC North

17 minutes ago

Premier League clubs to vote on dropping VAR

17 minutes ago

Is Palantir Technologies Stock a Buy?

17 minutes ago

Aston Villa star to miss second straight Euros after suffering another major injury

17 minutes ago

Bucs Boast 'One Of Easiest' 2024 Schedules Per NFL

18 minutes ago

Quantum internet draws near thanks to entangled memory breakthroughs

18 minutes ago

Biden administration, Texas duel in US appeals court over floating migrant barrier

18 minutes ago

Van der Poel opts for road race at Olympics ahead of mountain bikes

18 minutes ago

“Terminator Zero” exclusive first look takes the sci-fi saga to Tokyo

18 minutes ago

PIP announcements causing ‘fear, panic and anxiety’ for disabled people