How did a Chinese citizen come to vote in the Nov. 5 election? Same-day voter registration, lies on his paperwork, and a student ID card, Michigan Enjoyer can report exclusively.
In Michigan, voters who don’t show ID can sign a form attesting that they are who they claim to be. The University of Michigan student, Haoxiang Gao, signed the form.
But that’s not the story he first told authorities, according to an email from Ann Arbor City Clerk Jacqueline Beaudry. Michigan Enjoyer obtained the email through a Freedom of Information Act request.
Here’s how it went down, according to Beaudry, who explained the entire ordeal in an email to Washtenaw County Prosecuting Attorney Eli Savit, Michigan Department of State Elections Director Jonathan Brater, and CC’ing multiple City of Ann Arbor officials.
On Sunday, Oct. 27, Gao registered to vote, and voted.
Then he called the Ann Arbor city clerk’s office and asked about the rights of green-card holders to vote. The clerk’s office advised him there are no rights, that people with green cards can’t vote. Gao told the clerk’s office he had heard of someone doing this at U-M.
When the clerk’s office called the voting site at the University of Michigan Museum of Art, workers there said nobody had voted using a green card. They had used driver’s licenses, passports, or MCards, the U-M student ID. But no green cards.
Gao called back 20 minutes later, Beaudry wrote, and admitted that he was the person who voted improperly. To prove local residency, Gao had used his MCard and his directory entry in Wolverine Access, an online resource portal.
“We have copies of the voter registration form that both includes a checked box and a statement affirming of citizenship,” Beaudry wrote. “We have the application to vote as well.”
Beaudry sent the email on October 28, 2024, after Gao had stopped by the city clerk’s office. He claimed to have called Ann Arbor police and the University of Michigan Department of Public Safety earlier to report himself.
Beaudry reported that Gao was “very upset,” and office staff suggested he seek his own legal counsel.
A December 10 FOIA request to the City of Ann Arbor, however, which requested the total number of voters who registered to vote by voter method, was denied as “the records do not exist.”
Why doesn’t the City of Ann Arbor want to provide voter registration method data? Is it possible that other noncitizens voted in the 2024 election?
James David Dickson is host of the Enjoyer Podcast. Join him in conversation on X @downi75.